论文标题
通过快速和缓慢的材料来设计时间动力学,用于全光开关
Engineering the Temporal Dynamics with Fast and Slow Materials for All-Optical Switching
论文作者
论文摘要
所有光学开关均使用光脉冲作为信号和控制,均提供对超快时间尺度上光的性质的高级控制。这些开关仅受材料响应时间的限制,可以在Terahertz速度下运行,这对于技术驱动的应用程序(例如全光信号处理和超快成像)以及基本研究,例如频率翻译和新型光学媒体概念,例如光子时间晶体。在常规系统中,切换时间取决于单个活动材料的松弛响应,这是充满动态调整的挑战。这项工作表明,通过在单个设备中,所谓的快速和缓慢的材料的组合可以改变全光学开关的零至零响应时间。当在响应时间缓慢的材料的Epsilon-Near-near-near-near-near-Zero操作方案中进行探测时,即等离硝基钛的响应时间,该开关表现出相对较慢的纳米响应时间。然后,响应时间减少了在更快的材料的ENZ方向上达到皮秒时间尺度的响应时间,即铝氧化锌。总体而言,开关的响应时间在单个设备中显示为两个数量级的变化,并且可以通过探针信号与组成材料的相互作用进行选择性控制。通过控制多物质结构中的光 - 物质相互作用来调整开关速度的能力为全光开关设计提供了额外的自由度。此外,所提出的方法利用较慢的材料非常强大,可以增强场强度,而更快的材料则可以确保超快动态响应。提出的对切换时间的控制可能会导致多型传输,光学计算和非线性光学的关键应用程序中的新功能。
All optical switches offer advanced control over the properties of light at ultrafast timescales using optical pulses as both the signal and the control. Limited only by material response times, these switches can operate at terahertz speeds, essential for technology-driven applications such as all-optical signal processing and ultrafast imaging, as well as for fundamental studies such as frequency translation and novel optical media concepts such as photonic time crystals. In conventional systems, the switching time is determined by the relaxation response of a single active material, which is challenging to adjust dynamically. This work demonstrates that the zero-to-zero response time of an all-optical switch can instead be varied through the combination of so-called fast and slow materials in a single device. When probed in the epsilon-near-zero operational regime of a material with a slow response time, namely, plasmonic titanium nitride, the switch exhibits a relatively slow, nanosecond response time. The response time then decreases reaching the picosecond time scale in the ENZ regime of the faster material, namely, aluminum-doped zinc oxide. Overall, the response time of the switch is shown to vary by two orders of magnitude in a single device and can be selectively controlled through the interaction of the probe signal with the constituent materials. The ability to adjust the switching speed by controlling the light-matter interaction in a multi-material structure provides an additional degree of freedom in all-optical switch design. Moreover, the proposed approach utilizes slower materials that are very robust and allow to enhance the field intensities while faster materials ensure an ultrafast dynamic response. The proposed control of the switching time could lead to new functionalities within key applications in multiband transmission, optical computing, and nonlinear optics.