Carbon Nanotube Terahertz Detector
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Abstract
Terahertz (THz) technologies are
promising for diverse areas such
as medicine, bioengineering, astronomy, environmental monitoring,
and communications. However, despite decades of worldwide efforts,
the THz region of the electromagnetic spectrum still continues to
be elusive for solid state technology. Here, we report on the development
of a powerless, compact, broadband, flexible, large-area, and polarization-sensitive
carbon nanotube THz detector that works at room temperature. The detector
is sensitive throughout the entire range of the THz technology gap,
with responsivities as high as ∼2.5 V/W and polarization ratios
as high as ∼5:1. Complete thermoelectric and opto-thermal characterization
together unambiguously reveal the photothermoelectric origin of the
THz photosignal, triggered by plasmonic absorption and collective
antenna effects, and suggest that judicious design of thermal management
and quantum engineering of Seebeck coefficients will lead to further
enhancement of device performance