1 research outputs found
Efficient Excitation and Active Control of Propagating Graphene Plasmons with a Spatially Engineered Graphene Nanoantenna
Graphene plasmons (GPs) are of great importance in photonics
and
optoelectronics due to ultrahigh near-field confinement and enhancement.
However, the large momentum mismatch between GPs and incident light
hinders the efficient excitation of GPs. Conventional excitation schemes,
such as prism coupling, grating coupling, and resonant metal antennae,
go against the tunability and multifunction of the GP device. Here,
we numerically demonstrate the efficient excitation and active control
of propagating GPs in a resonant graphene nanoantenna (GNA)-based
GP launcher. The resonant GNA provides high-momentum near-field components
to match the wavevector of GPs, and the excitation efficiency is significantly
enhanced by the quarter-wavelength condition in a reflective configuration.
Furthermore, the propagating behavior of GPs is gate-tunable with
a GNA. Using spatially engineered GNAs, a tunable directional GP launcher
with an extinction ratio of larger than 1000 is achieved. Moreover,
we design a vertically crossed GNA-based propagating GP launcher that
can serve as the incident polarization information recording. Finally,
some graphene plasmonic circuits at the nanoscale, such as a GP waveguide,
splitter, and prism, are realized using spatial conductivity patterns
in graphene. The efficient excitation and flexible control of propagating
GPs with engineered GNAs associated with the spatial conductivity
patterns in graphene provide a gate-tunable and multifunctional platform
for nanoscale graphene plasmonic devices