Physical Review Research (Oct 2020)

Thermal origin of light emission in nonresonant and resonant nanojunctions

  • Christian Ott,
  • Stephan Götzinger,
  • Heiko B. Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.042019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 4
p. 042019

Abstract

Read online Read online

Electron tunneling is associated with light emission. In order to elucidate its generating mechanism, we provide an experimental ansatz that employs fixed-distance epitaxial graphene as metallic electrodes. In contrast to previous experiments, this open geometry permits an unobscured light spread from the tunnel junction, enabling both a reliable calibration of the visible to infrared emission spectrum and a detailed analysis of the dependence of the parameters involved. In a nonresonant geometry, the emitted light is perfectly characterized by a Planck spectrum. In an electromagnetically resonant environment, resonant radiation is added to the thermal spectrum, both being strictly proportional in intensity. In full agreement with a simple heat conduction model, we provide evidence that in both cases the light emission stems from a hot electronic subsystem in interaction with its linear electromagnetic environment. In a long-running discussion whether the light is of thermal or electromagnetic origin, these results on graphene nanojunctions clearly favor the thermal picture.