Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

Terahertz near-field microscopy of metallic circular split ring resonators with graphene in the gap

  • Chiara Schiattarella,
  • Alessandra Di Gaspare,
  • Leonardo Viti,
  • M. Alejandro Justo Guerrero,
  • Lianhe H. Li,
  • Mohammed Salih,
  • A. Giles Davies,
  • Edmund H. Linfield,
  • Jincan Zhang,
  • Hamideh Ramezani,
  • Andrea C. Ferrari,
  • Miriam S. Vitiello

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-62787-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Optical resonators are fundamental building blocks of photonic systems, enabling meta-surfaces, sensors, and transmission filters to be developed for a range of applications. Sub-wavelength size (< λ/10) resonators, including planar split-ring resonators, are at the forefront of research owing to their potential for light manipulation, sensing applications and for exploring fundamental light-matter coupling phenomena. Near-field microscopy has emerged as a valuable tool for mode imaging in sub-wavelength size terahertz (THz) frequency resonators, essential for emerging THz devices (e.g. negative index materials, magnetic mirrors, filters) and enhanced light-matter interaction phenomena. Here, we probe coherently the localized field supported by circular split ring resonators with single layer graphene (SLG) embedded in the resonator gap, by means of scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM), using either a single-mode or a frequency comb THz quantum cascade laser (QCL), in a detectorless configuration, via self-mixing interferometry. We demonstrate deep sub-wavelength mapping of the field distribution associated with in-plane resonator modes resolving both amplitude and phase of the supported modes, and unveiling resonant electric field enhancement in SLG, key for high harmonic generation.