Litcius/Paper detail

Two-beam coupling by a hot electron nonlinearity

Jagannath Paul, Mario Miscuglio, Yaliang Gui, Volker J. Sorger, J. K. Wahlstrand

2020Optics Letters14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Transparent conductive oxides such as indium tin oxide (ITO) bear the potential to deliver efficient all-optical functionality due to their record-breaking optical nonlinearity at epsilon near zero (ENZ) wavelengths. All-optical applications generally involve more than one beam, but, to our knowledge, the coherent interaction between beams has not previously been discussed in these materials, which have a hot electron nonlinearity. Here we study the optical nonlinearity at ENZ in ITO and show that spatial and temporal interference has important consequences in a two-beam geometry. Our pump-probe results reveal a polarization-dependent transient that is explained by diffraction of pump light into the probe direction by a temperature grating produced by pump-probe interference. We further show that this effect allows tailoring the nonlinearity by tuning the frequency or chirp. Having fine control over the strong and ultrafast ENZ nonlinearity may enable applications in all-optical neural networks, nanophotonics, and spectroscopy.

Topics & Concepts

OpticsUltrashort pulseNanophotonicsNonlinear opticsMaterials scienceIndium tin oxideGratingOptoelectronicsPhysicsLaserThin filmNanotechnologyPhotonic and Optical DevicesNeural Networks and Reservoir ComputingMechanical and Optical Resonators
Two-beam coupling by a hot electron nonlinearity | Litcius