APL Photonics (Nov 2021)
Ultrabroadband electrically controllable terahertz modulation based on GaAs Schottky diode structure
Abstract
We demonstrate an ultrabroadband electrically controllable terahertz modulator based on a Schottky diode structure formed with periodic metal microslits on an n-doped GaAs substrate. The mechanism of our design is different from that of the traditional Schottky diode-based THz electrical modulator, which uses free charge carriers in a substrate to control the resonant behavior of metamaterials. In our device, the modulation is based on free-carrier absorption on the THz wave and therefore broadband. The charge carrier concentration between the metal microslits is actively modified by applying a reverse bias voltage to generate a direct modulation of THz waves. The modulation performance is enhanced by the THz non-resonant electric field enhancement effect from the metal microslits. The experimental results indicate that the modulation depth is positively correlated with the electric field enhancement ratio at the depletion region in the gap and the number of microslits in the THz light spot-covered area. An averaged modulation depth of ∼40% in the measurable frequency range from 0.4 to 1.4 THz was achieved by the device with a metal microslits gap width of 2 µm and a period of 20 µm. A maximum modulation depth of ∼75% was achieved by stacking two devices back-to-back with a 3-dB down bandwidth modulation speed of ∼100 kHz. Further improvements of the device can be achieved by optimizing the parameters such as the free-carrier density in the doping layer, the active area size, and the specifications of the metal microslits.