Publication | Closed Access
Plasmon-induced enhancement of nonlinear optical processes in a double-resonant metallic nanostructure grating
16
Citations
18
References
2020
Year
Transient GratingOptical MaterialsEngineeringLaser ScienceNonlinear OpticsLaser ApplicationsDouble-resonant Metallic NanostructureMetallic NanomaterialsHigh-power LasersNonlinear Optical ProcessesMagnetoplasmonicsOptical PropertiesFour-wave MixingMetal SurfaceNonlinear ProcessNanophotonicsPlasmonic MaterialMaterials SciencePhotonicsPlasmon-induced EnhancementPhysicsNon-linear OpticUltrafast Laser PhysicsElectro-optics DevicePlasmonicsNatural SciencesOptical PhysicApplied PhysicsDynamic MetamaterialsLaser-surface Interactions
Nanostructured gratings in a metal surface can highly enhance nonlinear optical processes. The geometrical parameters that characterize a grating can be optimized to achieve intense near-fields, which in turn enhance the nonlinear optical signals. For a nonlinear process that involves multiple frequencies, like four-wave mixing (FWM), the optimization of grating parameters necessary to enhance the radiation in-coupling for both frequencies is not trivial. Here, we propose, compute, and experimentally demonstrate a grating design that is resonant to two excitation frequencies and thus enhances the frequency mixing processes more efficiently. Second- and third-order nonlinear mechanisms are studied using two spatially and temporally overlapped laser pulses with different frequencies. Using our grating design, we achieve an unprecedented nonlinear FWM enhancement factor of 7×103.
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