Publications by authors named "Jaeyeon Yu"

Nonlinear intersubband polaritonic metasurfaces based on coupling of the intersubband nonlinear optical response of quantum-engineered semiconductor heterostructures and electromagnetic modes of nanoresonators provide efficient frequency mixing with moderate pump intensities. The resonant nonlinear optical response, represented as a complex function, can be modulated via Stark tuning of intersubband transition energies under applied voltages. However, achieving full complex amplitude control (both phase and magnitude) remains challenging.

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Intersubband transitions in semiconductor heterostructures offer a way to achieve large and designable nonlinearities with dynamic modulation of intersubband energies through the Stark effect. One promising approach for incorporating these nonlinearities into free space optics is a nonlinear polaritonic metasurface, which derives resonant coupling between intersubband nonlinearities and optical modes in nanocavities. Recent work has shown efficient frequency mixing at low pumping intensities, with the ability to electrically tune the phase, amplitude, and spectral peak of it.

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Nonlinear intersubband polaritonic metasurfaces, which integrate giant nonlinear responses derived from intersubband transitions of multiple quantum wells (MQWs) with plasmonic nanoresonators, not only facilitate efficient frequency conversion at pump intensities on the order of few tens of kW cm but also enable electrical modulation of nonlinear responses at the individual meta-atom level and dynamic beam manipulation. The electrical modulation characteristics of the magnitude and phase of the nonlinear optical response are realized through Stark tuning of the resonant intersubband nonlinearity. In this study, we report, for the first time, experimental implementations of electrical modulation characteristics of mid-infrared third-harmonic generation (THG) using an intersubband polaritonic metasurface based on MQW with electrically tunable third-order nonlinear response.

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Nonlinear optical metasurfaces offer a possibility to perform frequency mixing without the phase-matching constraints of bulk nonlinear crystals and with control of the local nonlinear response at a sub-wavelength scale. Nonlinear inter-subband polaritonic metasurfaces created by combining the semiconductor heterostructures with quantum-engineered inter-subband nonlinear response and electromagnetically engineered metal-clad nanoresonators offer by far the largest second-order nonlinear response of all condensed matter systems reported to date. However, the nonlinear optical response of these metasurfaces is limited by optical intensity saturation in the nanoresonator hot spots that prevented the achievement of power conversion efficiencies over 0.

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Electrically reconfigurable metasurfaces that overcome the static limitations in controlling the fundamental properties of scattered light are opening new avenues for functional flat optics. This work proposes and experimentally demonstrates electrically phase-tunable mid-infrared metasurfaces based on the polaritonic coupling of Stark-tunable intersubband transitions in semiconductor heterostructures and electromagnetic modes in plasmonic nanoresonators. In the applied voltage range of -3 to +3 V, the local phase tuning of the light reflects from the metasurface, which enables the electrical control of the polarization state and wavefront of the reflected wave.

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Standoff chemical detection and identification techniques are necessary for ensuring safe exposure to dangerous substances. Molecular fingerprints of unknown chemicals can be measured using wavelength-tunable quantum cascade lasers operating in long-wavelength infrared. In this work, we present a method that can identify liquid chemicals on a reflective substrate via diffuse reflection spectra measurement from 50 cm away and multiple nonlinear regression analysis.

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Surface-enhanced infrared absorption (SEIRA) spectroscopy is a powerful methodology for sensing and identifying small quantities of analyte molecules via coupling between molecular vibrations and an enhanced near-field induced in engineered structures. A metamaterial absorber (MA) is proposed as an efficient SEIRA platform; however, its efficiency is limited because it requires the appropriate insulator thickness and has a limited accessible area for sensing. SEIRA spectroscopy is proposed using an MA with a 10 nm thick vertical nanogap, and a record-high reflection difference SEIRA signal of 36% is experimentally achieved using a 1-octadecanethiol monolayer target molecule.

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Nonlinear metasurfaces are advancing into a new paradigm of "flat nonlinear optics" owing to the ability to engineer local nonlinear responses in subwavelength-thin films. Recently, attempts have been made to expand the design space of nonlinear metasurfaces through nonlinear chiral responses. However, the development of metasurfaces that display both giant nonlinear circular dichroism and significantly large nonlinear optical response is still an unresolved challenge.

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We report a sensing platform for surface-enhanced infrared absorption (SEIRA) spectroscopy, based on Fano metamaterials (FMMs) on dielectric nanopedestals. FMMs consist of two parallel gold (Au) nanorod antennas, with a small horizontal coupler attached to one of the nanorod antenna. When placed on SiO dielectric nanopedestals, which exhibit strong field enhancements caused by the interference between subradiant and superradiant plasmonic resonances, they provide the highly enhanced E-field intensities formed near the Au nanoantenna, which can provide more enhanced molecular detection signals.

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