Forward and Backward Switching of Nonlinear Unidirectional Emission from GaAs Nanoantennas
Lei Xu, Grégoire Saerens, Maria Timofeeva, Daria A. Smirnova, Irina Volkovskaya, Mykhaylo Lysevych, Rocio Camacho-Morales, Marcus Cai, Khosro Z. Kamali, Lujun Huang, Fouad Karouta, Hark H. Tan
(+5 others)
2020
High-index III-V semiconductor nanoantennas have gained great attention for enhanced nonlinear light-matter interactions, in the last few years. However, the complexity of nonlinear emission profiles imposes severe constraints on practical applications, such as in optical communications and integrated optoelectronic devices. These complexities include the lack of unidirectional nonlinear emission and the severe challenges in switching between forward and backward emissions, due to the structure
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... of the susceptibility tensor of the III-V nanoantennas. Here, we propose a solution to both issues via engineering the nonlinear tensor of the nanoantennas. The special nonlinear tensorial properties of zinc-blende material can be used to engineer the nonlinear characteristics via growing the nanoantennas along different crystalline orientation. Based on the nonlinear multipolar effect, we have designed and fabricated (110)-grown GaAs nanoantennas, with engineered tensorial properties, embedded in a transparent low-index material. Our technique provides an approach not only for unidirectional second-harmonic generation (SHG) forward or backward emission, but also for switching from one to another. Importantly, switching the SHG emission directionality is obtained only by rotating the polarization of the incident light, without the need for physical variation to the antennas, or the environment. This characteristic is an advantage, as compared to other nonlinear nanoantennas, including (100)-and (111)grown III-V counterparts or silicon and germanium nanoantennas. Indeed, (110)-GaAs nanoantennas allow for engineering the nonlinear nanophotonic systems including nonlinear "Huygens-metasurfaces", and offer exciting opportunities for various nonlinear nanophotonics technologies, such as nanoscale light routing, light sources, as well as multifunctional flat optical elements.
doi:10.3929/ethz-b-000404472
fatcat:ngl43czrafcxfcvf6fg4euajsq