Presentation
9 September 2019 High-sensitivity gas sensing through plasmonic spectrometry (Conference Presentation)
Mona Jarrahi, Semih Cakmakyapan, Yen-Ju Lin, Ning Wang
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Detection of faint fluxes of photons at terahertz frequencies is crucial for various applications including biosensing, medical diagnosis, chemical detection, atmospheric studies, space explorations, high-data-rate communication, and security screening. Heterodyne terahertz spectrometers based on cryogenically cooled superconducting mixers have so far been the only instruments that can provide high spectral resolution and near-quantum-limited sensitivity levels. The operation temperature, bandwidth constraints, and complexity of these terahertz spectrometers have restricted their use to mostly astronomy and atmospheric studies, limiting the overall impact and wide-spread use of terahertz technologies. Here we introduce a spectrometry scheme that uses plasmonic photomixing for frequency downconversion to offer quantum-level sensitivities at room temperature for the first time. Frequency downconversion is achieved by mixing terahertz radiation and a heterodyning optical beam with a terahertz beat frequency in a plasmonics-enhanced semiconductor active region. We demonstrate spectrometer sensitivities down to 3 times the quantum-limit at room temperature. Our presented spectrometry scheme can be applicable to resolve both the high-resolution spectra of gas molecules and mid-resolution spectra of condensed phase samples over a total operable bandwidth of 0.1-5 THz. As an example, we use the presented spectrometer to resolve the spectral information of ammonia, which has a number of narrowband absorption peaks over the 0.1-5 THz frequency range. With a versatile design capable of broadband spectrometry, this plasmonic photomixer has broad applicability to quantum optics, chemical sensing, biological studies, medical diagnosis, high data-rate communication, as well as astronomy and atmospheric studies.
Conference Presentation
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mona Jarrahi, Semih Cakmakyapan, Yen-Ju Lin, and Ning Wang "High-sensitivity gas sensing through plasmonic spectrometry (Conference Presentation)", Proc. SPIE 11081, Active Photonic Platforms XI, 1108125 (9 September 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2524432
Advertisement
Advertisement
KEYWORDS
Spectroscopy

Plasmonics

Spectrometers

Terahertz radiation

Astronomy

Atmospheric sensing

Biosensing

Back to Top