z-logo
Premium
Electrically Micro‐Polarized Amorphous Sodo‐Niobate Film Competing with Crystalline Lithium Niobate Second‐Order Optical Response
Author(s) -
Karam Lara,
Adamietz Frédéric,
Michau Dominique,
Gonçalves Claudia,
Kang Myungkoo,
Sharma Rashi,
Murugan Ganapathy Senthil,
Cardinal Thierry,
Fargin Evelyn,
Rodriguez Vincent,
Richardson Kathleen A.,
Dussauze Marc
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced optical materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.89
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 2195-1071
DOI - 10.1002/adom.202000202
Subject(s) - materials science , lithium niobate , amorphous solid , optoelectronics , dielectric , photonics , anisotropy , nanotechnology , optics , chemistry , physics , organic chemistry
The design of active optical devices integrating second‐order nonlinear (SONL) optical responses typically relies on the use of dielectric crystalline materials such as lithium niobate (LN) or semiconductors such as GaAs. Despite high SONL susceptibilities, these materials present important geometry constrains inherent to their crystalline nature limiting the complexity of the designed photonic systems. Conversely, amorphous materials are versatile optical media compatible with broad platform designs possessing a wide range of optical properties attributable to their composition flexibility. Demonstrated here for the first time in an amorphous inorganic material, a magnitude of SONL optical susceptibility (χ (2) = 29 pm V −1 at 1.06 µm) comparable to that of LN single crystal is reported. By using a thermo‐electrical imprinting process, fine control of the induced uniaxial anisotropy is demonstrated at the micrometer scale. This work paves the way for the future design of integrated nonlinear photonic circuits based on amorphous inorganic materials enabled by the spatially selective and high SONL optical susceptibility of these promising and novel optical materials.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here