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2.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 17(1): 61-66, 2022 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34782777

ABSTRACT

Quantum confinement of the charge carriers of graphene is an effective way to engineer its properties. This is commonly realized through physical edges that are associated with the deterioration of mobility and strong suppression of plasmon resonances. Here, we demonstrate a simple, large-area, edge-free nanostructuring technique, based on amplifying random nanoscale structural corrugations to a level where they efficiently confine charge carriers, without inducing significant inter-valley scattering. This soft confinement allows the low-loss lateral ultra-confinement of graphene plasmons, scaling up their resonance frequency from the native terahertz to the commercially relevant visible range. Visible graphene plasmons localized into nanocorrugations mediate much stronger light-matter interactions (Raman enhancement) than previously achieved with graphene, enabling the detection of specific molecules from femtomolar solutions or ambient air. Moreover, nanocorrugated graphene sheets also support propagating visible plasmon modes, as revealed by scanning near-field optical microscopy observation of their interference patterns.

3.
Opt Express ; 25(22): 27015-27027, 2017 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29092183

ABSTRACT

Optical second harmonic generation (SHG) from nanostructured graphene has been studied in the framework of classical electromagnetism using a surface integral equation method. Single disks and dimers are considered, demonstrating that the nonlinear conversion is enhanced when a localized surface plasmon resonance is excited at either the fundamental or second harmonic frequency. The proposed approach, beyond the electric dipole approximation used in the quantum description, reveals that SHG from graphene nanostructures with centrosymmetric shapes is possible when retardation effects and the excitation of high plasmonic modes at the second harmonic frequency are taken into account. Several SHG effects similar to those arising in metallic nanostructures, such as the silencing of the nonlinear emission and the design of double resonant nanostructures, are also reported. Finally, it is shown that the SHG from graphene disk dimers is very sensitive to a relative vertical displacement of the disks, opening new possibilities for the design of nonlinear plasmonic nanorulers.

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