skip to main content


Title: Optical Chirality Detection Using a Topological Insulator Transistor
Abstract

Optical chirality is an effective means in screening molecules and their enantiomers in bioengineering, and recently has garnered attention as an implementation of qubits in quantum information processing. The conventional detection of circularly polarized light (CPL) is based on phase retardation and polarization separation using multiple optical components. An intrinsic solid‐state chirality detection device would be favorable for easier integration and implementation. Optical spin injection to the spin‐momentum‐locked topological surface states of topological insulators (TIs) by circularly polarized light leads to a directional DC photocurrent and hence possible circular polarization detection. However, this DC photocurrent is also accompanied by other photo‐responses. Here, a photodetection strategy using a TI transistor which senses CPL without the use of any additional components is demonstrated, it achieves a uniform response over the entire device with a sensitivity ≈5.6%. The Stokes parameters can also be extracted by arithmetic operation of photocurrents obtained with different bias and gate for a complete characterization of a polarized light beam. Therefore, this method enables chirality detection and Stokes parameter analysis using a single device. The proposed miniaturized intrinsic chirality detectors facilitate polarimetry sensing in applications from circular dichroism spectroscopy to biomedical diagnosis.

 
more » « less
Award ID(s):
1641101
NSF-PAR ID:
10452999
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  
Publisher / Repository:
Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Advanced Optical Materials
Volume:
9
Issue:
10
ISSN:
2195-1071
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract

    Three-dimensional topological insulators have been demonstrated in recent years, which possess intriguing gapless, spin-polarized Dirac states with linear dispersion only on the surface. The spin polarization of the topological surface states is also locked to its momentum, which allows controlling motion of electrons using optical helicity, i.e., circularly polarized light. The electrical and thermal transport can also be significantly tuned by the helicity-control of surface state electrons. Here, we report studies of photo-thermoelectric effect of the topological surface states in Bi2Te2Se thin films with large tunability using varied gate voltages and optical helicity. The Seebeck coefficient can be altered by more than five times compared to the case without spin injection. This deep tuning is originated from the optical helicity-induced photocurrent which is shown to be enhanced, reduced, turned off, and even inverted due to the change of the accessed band structures by electrical gating. The helicity-selected topological surface state thus has a large effect on thermoelectric transport, demonstrating great opportunities for realizing helicity control of optoelectronic and thermal devices.

     
    more » « less
  2. Abstract

    Chiral perovskite nanocrystals have emerged as an interesting chiral excitonic platform that combines both structural flexibility and superior optoelectronic properties. Despite several recent demonstrations of optical activity in various chiral perovskite nanocrystals, efficient circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) with tunable energies remains a challenge. The chirality imprinting mechanism as a function of perovskite nanocrystal dimensionality remains elusive. Here, atomically thin inorganic perovskite nanoplatelets (NPLs) are synthesized with precise control of layer thickness and are functionalized by chiral surface ligands, serving as a unique platform to probe the chirality transfer mechanism at the organic/perovskite interface. It is found that chirality is successfully imprinted into mono‐, bi‐, and tri‐layer inorganic perovskite NPLs, exhibiting tunable circular dichroism (CD) and CPL responses. However, chirality transfer decreases in thicker NPLs, resulting in decreased CD and CPL dissymmetry factors for thicker NPLs. Aided by large‐scale first‐principles calculations, it is proposed that chirality transfer is mainly mediated through a surface distortion rather than a hybridization of electronic states, giving rise to symmetry breaking in the perovskite lattice and spin‐split conduction bands. The findings described here provide an in‐depth understanding of chirality transfer and design principles for distorted‐surface perovskites for chiral photonic applications.

     
    more » « less
  3. : Chiral inorganic nanostructures strongly interact with photons changing their polarization state. The resulting circularly polarized light emission (CPLE) has cross-disciplinary importance for a variety of chemical/biological processes and is essential for development of chiral photonics. However, the polarization effects are often complex and could be misinterpreted. CPLE in nanostructured media has multiple origins and several optical effects are typically convoluted into a single output. Analysing CPLE data obtained for nanoclusters, NPs, nanoassemblies, and nanocomposites from metals, chalcogenides, perovskite, and other nanostructures, we show that there are several distinct groups of nanomaterials for which CPLE is dominated either by circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) or circularly polarized scattering (CPS); there are also many nanomaterials for which they are comparable. We also show that (1) CPL and CPS contributions involve light-matter interactions at different structural levels; (2) contribution from CPS is especially strong for nanostructured microparticles, nanoassemblies and composites; and (3) engineering of materials with strongly polarized light emission requires synergistic implementation of CPL and CPS effects. These findings are expected to guide development of CPLE materials in a variety of technological fields, including 3D displays, information storage, biosensors, optical spintronics, and biological probes. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract

    All‐optical control and detection of magnetic states for high‐density recording necessitate nanophotonic approaches to amplify local light intensity below the diffraction limit. Sculpting the near‐field phase and polarization can additionally strengthen magneto‐optical effects that rely on circularly polarized pulses, such as all‐optical helicity‐dependent switching, imaging, and spin‐wave excitation. Here, high‐refractive‐index dielectric nanoantennas illuminated with circularly polarized light resonantly enhance local electric field rotation by more than sixfold within [Pt/Co]Nthin films. Sub‐wavelength arrays of amorphous Si nanodisks, or metasurfaces, patterned on perpendicularly magnetized films support Mie‐type resonances that modulate reflection and transmission dissymmetry by >±2% in experiments. Spatial and spectral interference between dipolar modes, proximity effects, and gain are evaluated by varying disk aspect ratio, metasurface–metal separation, and magnetic film thickness, respectively. Simulated enhancements in magnetic circular birefringence and differential absorption are correlated with amplified local field rotation at electric dipolar modes. Greater achievable amplifications are shown via simulations with single‐crystalline Si metasurfaces exhibiting lower losses, including a 12‐fold strengthened electric field rotation within ferromagnetic layers. The metasurface design rules established here could enable nanoscale localization of all‐optical magnetic switching with lowered laser fluence thresholds, as well as enhanced magneto‐optical responses for light‐assisted reading in spintronic devices.

     
    more » « less
  5. Abstract

    Monolayer ternary tellurides based on alloying different transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) can result in new two‐dimensional (2D) materials ranging from semiconductors to metals and superconductors with tunable optical and electrical properties. Semiconducting WTe2xS2(1‐x)monolayer possesses two inequivalent valleys in the Brillouin zone, each valley coupling selectively with circularly polarized light (CPL). The degree of valley polarization (DVP) under the excitation of CPL represents the purity of valley polarized photoluminescence (PL), a critical parameter for opto‐valleytronic applications. Here, new strategies to efficiently tailor the valley‐polarized PL from semiconducting monolayer WTe2xS2(1‐x)at room temperature (RT) through alloying and back‐gating are presented. The DVP at RT is found to increase drastically from < 5% in WS2to 40% in WTe0.12S1.88by Te‐alloying to enhance the spin‐orbit coupling. Further enhancement and control of the DVP from 40% up to 75% is demonstrated by electrostatically doping the monolayer WTe0.12S1.88via metallic 1T′‐WTe2electrodes, where the use of 1T′‐WTe2substantially lowers the Schottky barrier height (SBH) and weakens the Fermi‐level pinning of the electrical contacts. The demonstration of drastically enhanced DVP and electrical tunability in the valley‐polarized emission from 1T′‐WTe2/WTe0.12S1.88heterostructures paves new pathways towards harnessing valley excitons in ultrathin valleytronic devices for RT applications.

     
    more » « less