Ultrafast Silicon Photonics with Visible to Mid-Infrared
Pumping of Silicon Nanocrystals
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Abstract
Dynamic optical control
of infrared (IR) transparency and refractive
index is achieved using boron-doped silicon nanocrystals excited with
mid-IR optical pulses. Unlike previous silicon-based optical switches,
large changes in transmittance are achieved without a fabricated structure
by exploiting strong light coupling of the localized surface plasmon
resonance (LSPR) produced from free holes of p-type silicon nanocrystals.
The choice of optical excitation wavelength allows for selectivity
between hole heating and carrier generation through intraband or interband
photoexcitation, respectively. Mid-IR optical pumping heats the free
holes of p-Si nanocrystals to effective temperatures greater than
3500 K. Increases of the hole effective mass at high effective hole
temperatures lead to a subpicosecond change of the dielectric function,
resulting in a redshift of the LSPR, modulating mid-IR transmission
by as much as 27%, and increasing the index of refraction by more
than 0.1 in the mid-IR. Low hole heat capacity dictates subpicosecond
hole cooling, substantially faster than carrier recombination, and
negligible heating of the Si lattice, permitting mid-IR optical switching
at terahertz repetition frequencies. Further, the energetic distribution
of holes at high effective temperatures partially reverses the Burstein–Moss
effect, permitting the modulation of transmittance at telecommunications
wavelengths. The results presented here show that doped silicon, particularly
in micro- or nanostructures, is a promising dynamic metamaterial for
ultrafast IR photonics