Scientific Reports (Aug 2017)
Tuneable strong optical absorption in a graphene-insulator-metal hybrid plasmonic device
Abstract
Abstract An optical device configuration allowing efficient electrical tuning of near total optical absorption in monolayer graphene is reported. This is achieved by combining a two-dimensional gold coated diffraction grating with a transparent spacer and a suspended graphene layer to form a doubly resonant plasmonic structure. Electrical tuneability is achieved with the inclusion of an ionic gel layer which plays the role of the gate dielectric. The underlying grating comprises a 2-dimensional array of inverted pyramids with a triple layer coating consisting of a reflective gold layer and two transparent dielectric spacers, also forming a vertical micro-cavity known as a Salisbury screen. Resonant coupling of plasmons between the gold grating and graphene result in strong enhancement of plasmon excitations in the atomic monolayer. Plasmon excitations can be dynamically switched off by lowering the chemical potential of graphene. Very high absorption values for an atomic monolayer and large tuning range, extremely large electrostatically induced changes in absorption over very small shifts in chemical potential are possible thus allowing for very sharp transitions in the optical behavior of the device. Overall this leads to the possibility of making electrically tunable plasmonic switches and optical memory elements by exploiting slow modes.