Publication | Open Access
Current-driven plasmonic boom instability in three-dimensional gated periodic ballistic nanostructures
63
Citations
29
References
2016
Year
PlasmonicsElectrical EngineeringEngineeringPhysicsNanoelectronicsNanotechnologyApplied PhysicsApplied Plasma PhysicPlasma InstabilityNanoscale ModelingMagnetohydrodynamicsPlasma PhysicsElectron TransportComputational ElectromagneticsDipole ChargeNanoscale ScienceNanophotonicsBallistic Nanostructures
An alternative approach of using a distributed transmission line analogy for solving transport equations for ballistic nanostructures is applied for solving the three-dimensional problem of electron transport in gated ballistic nanostructures with periodically changing width. The structures with varying width allow for modulation of the electron drift velocity while keeping the plasma velocity constant. We predict that in such structures biased by a constant current, a periodic modulation of the electron drift velocity due to the varying width results in the instability of the plasma waves if the electron drift velocity to plasma wave velocity ratio changes from below to above unity. The physics of such instability is similar to that of the sonic boom, but, in the periodically modulated structures, this analog of the sonic boom is repeated many times leading to a larger increment of the instability. The constant plasma velocity in the sections of different width leads to resonant excitation of the unstable plasma modes with varying bias current. This effect (that we refer to as the superplasmonic boom condition) results in a strong enhancement of the instability. The predicted instability involves the oscillating dipole charge carried by the plasma waves. The plasmons can be efficiently coupled to the terahertz electromagnetic radiation due to the periodic geometry of the gated structure. Our estimates show that the analyzed instability should enable powerful tunable terahertz electronic sources.
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