The present invention relates to an optical structure for localising an electromagnetic field in the vicinity of an active optical area.
In particular, such optical structures are used in photodetectors, in particular in quantum well photodetectors, known under the acronym QWIP (for Quantum Well infrared Photodetector), operating in the medium infrared, in order to improve their detectivity. More precisely, these optical structures are used therein to obtain a concentration of the field into the detecting active area, which can thus have substantially reduced dimensions, to match the field concentrating area. In practice, the active area of the photodetector is provided in the vicinity of the structure and focused on the field concentrating (or localising) area. As a result, the signal to noise ratio is notably improved with respect to photodetector devices having no such optical structures: since the active area is smaller, the photoelectric noise generated therefrom is decreased. The active area is adapted to the field concentrating area, and as a result, nothing is lost in terms of wanted signal.
Concentrating the luminous energy on a reduced photodetector surface obtained through these optical structures relies on exploiting localising phenomena of near field and on properties of some surface waves called surface plasmons.
In particular, such optical structures for photodetector are disclosed in the application FR 000314717. In an exemplary embodiment given in this application, a corresponding optical structure includes a transparent dielectric material in the spectral range of the optical radiation. This layer is etched so as to obtain a relief y=h(x,z) in an orthogonal reference frame 0xyz, invariant along 0z and variable along 0x. It is covered with a metal film. The profile in the plane 0xy is such that it can be defined by a mathematical function, which is the sum of two periodical functions f and g, with f representing the coupling function between the incident light on the photodetector and the electromagnetic field of the surface excited wave, of space period Λ and g representing the localising function of space period ½Λ and which has a fault in periodicity, located in the centre portion of the optical structure. The relative phase δΛ between f and g determines the ultimate coupling properties of the surface wave. Let be λ the average wavelength of the incident radiation, and n the average refractive index of the optical structure, then the period Λ is advantageously λ/2n for the incidence wave coupling to be optimum. Concentrating the field is achieved in an area around the fault in periodicity of the structure.
In one example, corresponding optical structures have a stepwise or facet profile. The profile is obtained by means of several etching steps, whose number depends on the complexity of the profile to be produced.
There are technological problems with respect to the etching steps required to produce the optical structure disclosed in this application. In particular, this results in problems of re-alignment of the etching masks between each step and of checking the etching depth, that is step height, which is one of the most difficult technological parameters to be controlled.
Further, these optical structures provide low flexibility as to setting the localising properties of the electromagnetic wave under the optical structure. In particular, decoupling the wave decay along the 0x axis and along the 0y axis is unknown, because the only degree of freedom in the structure is the etching step duration. In the optical structures obtained according to that principle, the relative phase between both superposed networks is fixed.
It is an object of the invention to improve the optical structures for localising an electromagnetic field, by making their parameterising and manufacturing easier, so as to improve their properties while reducing manufacturing costs and improving reliability. It is another object of the invention to make the parameterising of these structures easier, to allow a wider applicability of such optical structures, in particular to other devices using photosensitive members, such as light or electron emitters.
It is thus an object of the invention to define an optical structure providing several degrees of freedom as to its parameterising, in such a way to allow the separated setting of different parameters, depending on the localising effects along the 0x and 0y axes being searched for.
Another object of the invention is an optical structure, easy to make, that can thus be readily integrated in a manufacturing process of an optical device, and that is applicable to a wider diversity of photodetector and/or emitter devices.
According to the invention, an optical structure is defined from the periodical repetition of a unit pattern, whose profile in Oxy cross section is defined by a substantially binary shape, defined by two relative heights, that define an etching depth (on Oy axis), and four parameters variable on 0x axis. In the first order, the profile of the unit pattern can be defined by both periodical functions f and g which are described above. The pattern parameters are set with the purpose of obtaining the desired coupling and localising properties for the application under consideration.
Then, a single technological step enables an optical structure with required properties to be obtained, from the drawing of an etching mask.
By producing an area by replicating a unit pattern according to the invention, an optical structure parameterizable, easy to make from the technological point of view and adaptable to various optical emitters or detectors is thereby obtained.
Therefore, the invention relates to a device including at least one active optical member provided in a medium of positive dielectric permeability and, in the proximity of said active member, an optical structure including a layer of a material of negative dielectric permeability, said layer having, located in an orthogonal reference frame 0xyz, a surface having a relief y=h(x,z) invariant along 0z and variable along 0x, the 0y axis being oriented from the positive dielectric permeability medium to said layer of negative dielectric permeability, said surface contacting said positive dielectric permeability medium and including a first relief area, having a profile in 0xy cross section that includes a periodic repetition of a unit pattern and a second relief area symmetrical to said first area with respect to a plane of symmetry parallel to 0yz, said first and second areas being separated by a third layer provided in the centre of the structure, giving rise, compared with said first and second areas, to a fault in periodicity of the relief surface, characterised in that said unit pattern is defined by four succeeding portions, a first portion of full width at half maximum a and a second portion of full width at half maximum b, a third portion of full width at half maximum c and a fourth portion of full width at half maximum d, said first and third portions having substantially the same height ht, said second and fourth portions having substantially the same height hd different from ht, with ht strictly higher than hd and in that a, b, c, d and hg=ht−hd are selected profile parameters such that:
The invention also relates to two preferred drawings of the profile, for the properties they provide to the structure, and to applications of the optical structure according to the invention depending on the active area device under consideration: photodetector, optical radiation or electron beam emitter.
Still other objects and advantages of the present invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, wherein the preferred embodiments of the invention are shown and described, simply by way of illustration of the best mode contemplated of carrying out the invention. As will be realized, the invention is capable of other and different embodiments, and its several details are capable of modifications in various obvious aspects, all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and description thereof are to be regarded as illustrative in nature, and not as restrictive.
The present invention is illustrated by way of example, and not by limitation, in the figures of the accompanying drawings, wherein elements having the same reference numeral designations represent like elements throughout and wherein:
a and 5b show a second preferred embodiment of an optical structure according to the invention;
a to 8c show a light wave emitting device including an optical structure according to the invention;
a to 10f show a field emission device including an optical structure according to the invention.
This optical structure 1 includes a layer 1b of a material of negative dielectric permeability εr, such as a metal or a doped semi-conductor.
An orthogonal reference frame 0xyz is chosen, with Ox and 0z axes being the surfaces axes and 0y axis the height axis. In all figures, let 0y axis be oriented from medium 2 of positive dielectric permeability to the layer 1b of negative dielectric permeability, that is oriented upwards in the figures.
The layer 1b of the optical structure has a surface having a relief y=h(x,z) invariant along 0z, and variable along 0x. Let be y=h(x) the profile of this layer in the 0xy plane. In the portion shown in this figure, this profile corresponds to the periodical repetition, at the period Λ, of a unit pattern M
The period Λ is chosen to correspond to the operating spectral domain of the device into which is integrated the structure, for example a photodetector. Let be λ the operating wavelength of detection of the photodetector, then the period Λ is chosen so that Λ. ηaverage is substantially equal to λ, where ηaverage is the average refractive index of the optical structure.
As illustrated in
The parameters a, b, c, d correspond to the widths of four portions of a straight line, a first portion pa of width a and a second portion pb of width b, and a third portion pc of width c and a fourth portion pd of width d. The first and third portions have substantially the same height ht. The second and fourth portions have substantially the same height hd different from ht. The parameter hg is equal to ht−hd. The parameters a, b, c and d of the profile are chosen so that:
The parameters a, b, c and d and hg of the pattern M
This binary profile is the most effective, but in practice, slightly different profiles can be obtained, in particular with uncertainties of up to 20 percent of the average value on the heights ht and hd. Consequently, the general pattern of the invention is to be considered by taking the values a, b, c and d at half maximum, with portions pa and pc of substantially the same height and portions pb and pd Of substantially the same height.
There is thus provided 5 parameters defining the profile h(x) for defining an optical structure according to the invention. These parameters are simple to be obtained: a single etching operation is required, and they enable coupling and localising properties of an optical structure according to the invention to be adapted.
Indeed, the profile h(x) can be described as shown in
The relative phase shift δΛ between both harmonics corresponds to the spacing between two respective maxima (
In particular, the parameters a, b, c, d and hg are chosen so that the complex amplitude of the first non-zero harmonic of order higher than two is negligible with respect to the complex amplitudes α and β of the harmonics of 1st and 2nd orders. In practice, they are chosen for the 3rd order to be minimized. They are also chosen so that the relative phase shift δΛ that determines over the coupling is optimum.
More precisely, the complex amplitude cc of the harmonic f(x, y, Λ) of 1st order 1 is written as:
The complex amplitude p of the harmonic g(x, y, ½Λ) of 2nd order is written as:
The relative phase shift is a function of the phase between β and α: δΛ=Λ/2π·Φ(β/α) (Eq. 3), (Φ being equal to the inverse tangent of the imaginary part of β/α on the real part of β/α).
Four parameters can be expressed as a function of a fifth one. For example, b, c and d can be expressed as variables, function of a, knowing further that a, b, c and d satisfy a+b(a)+c(a)+d(a)=Λ. a is then chosen so that the higher orders are minimized, at least the first non-zero order higher than two.
For example, to minimize the third order, a is chosen so that
The profile h(x) of the unit pattern M
A periodical structure according to the invention is based on replicating the unit pattern M
More precisely, an optical structure according to the invention thus includes, as schematically shown in
Both areas A and B are separated by a third area C provided at the centre of the structure.
The area C creates a fault in periodicity of the profile y=h(x,z) of the optical structure. The fault in periodicity of the structure is what leads to the localising effect in x and y of the electromagnetic field under the layer of negative dielectric permeability, at the area C.
This area C can have any profile in the plane 0xy, and is invariant along 0z. In practice, it can be obtained by different ways.
In the invention, there is provided two advantageous embodiments of an optical structure according to the invention.
A first embodiment consists of inserting between both symmetrical areas A and B, an area C having a length equal to an integer m equal to or higher than 1 of periods Λ. The areas A and B are the length of the area C away from each other. This area C can have any profile. To make its producing easier, it is substantially of the same height throughout this length.
A second embodiment consists of creating a symmetry with respect to a straight line parallel to Oy and intersecting a specific point of the pattern. The area C has then a null length. Both areas A and B intersect on the axis of symmetry π. These two advantageous embodiments are detailed infra.
The first preferred embodiment of an optical structure according to the invention is shown in 0xy cross section in
The area C1 can have any profile in the plane 0xy, and is invariant along 0z. In the example shown, this area C1 has an height substantially equal to the height ht of the first and third portions of the profile hI(x), that is, in this area, no etching has been carried out. Conversely, this area C1 could have been etched throughout its length, such that this area would have an height substantially equal to the height hd of the second and fourth portions of the profile hI(x). More generally, this area has substantially the same height throughout its length l (namely, it has a relief substantially planar along 0xz), which is easy to carry out.
The area C1 is such that it starts in a point of position x1 on 0x axis substantially corresponding to the middle of a first portion pa of a unit pattern M
Constructing process of such a profile hI(x) as schematically shown with m=1 in
The relative phase shift δΛ between the harmonics f(x,y,Λ) and g(x, y,½Λ) is then substantially null.
The area C1 creates a fault in periodicity of the structure. As a result, there occurs a localisation of the surface waves along 0x and 0y under this area.
Thus defined optical structure with a profile hI(x) enables the field localising in 0x and 0y to be optimized, as a function of hg, a, b, c and d satisfying the equations Eq. 1 to Eq. 4.
An optical structure as shown in
It is more particularly intended to applications in narrow bands, where the frequency variance Δν is far less than 0.1ν.
Preferably, the following relationships are chosen:
This further constraint reduces the number of solutions to the previous equation Eq. 4, but enables the drawing of the optical structure according to the invention to be simplified.
The second preferred embodiment is shown in
The point P of position xp is chosen so that the following equation is satisfied:
Note that such an equation has two solutions.
This equation allows insuring an optimum coupling between the electromagnetic field and the luminous wave which, it should be remembered, depends on the relative phase between the two harmonics of 1st and 2nd order.
As shown in
The area C2 of the optical structure according to the invention is an area of null length which, in the plane 0xyz, corresponds to or merges with the plane of symmetry π.
For parameters a, b, c, d, hg chosen by using Eq. 1 to Eq. 4, and xp chosen so that equation Eq. 5 is satisfied, the relative phase shift δΛ between the first harmonic f(x,y,Λ) and the second harmonic g(x,y,½Λ) of the corresponding Fourier series, is substantially equal to Λ/4.
An optical structure having such a profile hII(x) favours a strong localization on 0x axis, in a centre area of the optical structure, which is bounded around area C2.
Such an optical structure is more particularly adapted to non narrow band applications, typically with a variance Δν of the frequency in the order of 0.1ν, or in a case where absorption into metal prevents the resonant effects upon exploiting.
An optical structure according to the invention, according to either profile described in relation to
If the medium of positive dielectric permeability is vacuum, then the optical structure will generally be supported by any substrate.
If the medium of positive dielectric permeability is a semi-conductor material, then the optical structure could be protected by a protecting layer, for example a dielectric layer, or could be exposed to the open air.
Regarding the dielectric permeability, it could be noted that, in all conductors, the dielectric permeability changes of sign: it is negative at a low frequency and positive at a high frequency. The transition frequency, called plasma frequency in the literature, depends on conductibility. Metals have thus their plasma frequency in the ultraviolet range. The plasma frequency of semi-conductor materials depends on doping. It is generally in the far infrared domain (wavelength greater than 30 microns). If semi-conductor materials are strongly doped, they may come close to the plasma frequency of metals. That is the way a relief surface of the optical structure according to the invention can be made in a metal or very strongly doped semi-conductor material.
Finally, as clearly understood from above, the negative or positive dielectric permeability referred to in the invention, is regarded with respect to the operating spectral domain of the device embodying the structure, that is the wavelength of the incident optical radiation that is to be detected or the wavelength of the optical radiation emitted from the device.
Different applications of an optical structure according to the invention will now be described, according to either one of the embodiments previously described. In these applications, the optical structure is defined by its areas A, B and C as described supra.
In this device 10, the medium of positive dielectric permeability is a semi-conductor type material. It provides an electrical signal corresponding to the detection of an electromagnetic wave, by means of an active optical member 21 for the purpose of photodetecting. In particular, quantum well type photodetectors are used to detect an infrared radiation with wavelengths between 1 and hundreds of micrometers.
The photo-detector 10 substantially includes, according to the illustration in a cross sectional view in the plane 0xy:
The optical structure 30 includes a layer 31 that is etched and covered with a metal film 32, shown with a bold line, which provides the relief surface being searched for, for example of the type hI(x) or hII(x). In the illustration of
The choice of the profile between hI(x) and hII(x) depends on properties wanted for photodetection, in particular, but not only, if the operating spectral band must be of narrow band (hI(x)) type or of wide band (hII(x)) type.
It is noted that in such a detecting device provided with an optical structure of the invention, the amplitude α of the first harmonic defines the coupling and the amplitude β and the relative phase shift δΛ define the localisation along 0x and 0y.
In an alternative not represented, the optical structure 30 is made in a strongly doped semi-conductor layer, for the purpose of providing a negative dielectric permeability in the operating spectral domain of the photodetector, whose upper face has the relief according to the invention, with for example a profile of hI(x) or hII(x) type.
The photodetecting area 21 is surrounded by a peripheral area 22 inactive at the wavelength considered. It has x and z dimensions chosen to substantially correspond to the localisation of the electromagnetic field in x. In the case of a structure of hI(x) type, the x dimensions of the photodetecting area 21 substantially correspond to the length of the area C.
The photodetecting area is located in the vicinity of relief surface of the optical structure, to optimize the detection. Indeed, the amplitude of the electromagnetic field decreases from the relief surface to the substrate.
In practice, the electrical contact areas 51 and 52 which enable the electrical signal from the area active to be detected are provided. To that end, as illustrated for example, a doped semi-conducting layer 13, between the semi-conducting layer 20 and the optical structure 30, and a doped semi-conducting layer 12 between the semi-conducting layer 20 and the substrate 11, are provided. The electrical contacts 51 and 52 are then taken on these conducting layers 12 and 13 which are doped semi-conducting layers sandwiching the active area.
The layers or areas 11, 12, 22, 13 and 31 are chosen to be transparent in the operating spectral domain of the photodetector, all of them provide a positive dielectric permeability εr for the spectral domain in which the photodetection proceeds, typically the infrared domain. It is known that the different semi-conductor layer 11, 12, 20, 13 of the device are, for example, materials from family III-V.
The photo-detector including an optical structure according to the invention is operating as follows. The light beam L to be detected illuminates the photo-detector by the substrate 11, under an incidence close to the normal. This beam goes through the substrate 11, the conducting layer 12 and the semi-conducting layer 20 including the photodetecting active area 21, without any sensitive attenuations. It reaches the optical structure 30, causing a surface wave in magnetic transverse bias to be excited, that is to say whose electrical field is perpendicular to the network. The optical structure also serves to localise the luminous beam it picks up, in a centre area corresponding to the photodetecting area 21. Therefore, the signal to noise ratio is improved, which is aimed at.
An optical structure according to the invention enables a photodetecting area of small dimensions to be provided, corresponding in practice to a small region beneath the area C. The luminous beam picked up by the device is localised in this photodetecting area. The signal to noise ratio is improved.
In a quantum well type photodetector, limiting the dimensions of the quantum well photodetecting area 21 can imply:
An alternative to a photodetecting device according to the invention is represented in
Implementing this alternative requires an optical structure whose area C of the relief surface has a non null length, that is with a profile of hI(x) type.
A corresponding photodetector (
The layer 111 is etched so as to have a reverse relief surface with respect to the profile hI(x) (
The first layer 112 of a material of negative dielectric permeability covers the relief surface of the layer 111, so that the area C is formed by a hole in this layer. The active optical member 120 is directly provided into contact with layer 111, this layer 111 being at a level hc above the first layer 112 in the third area C, with a height hc higher than those of the portions pa and pb of the profile according to the invention.
The second layer 113 of a material of negative dielectric permeability is provided above the active optical member, and electrically isolated from the first layer 112.
The first and second layers 112 and 113 provide a first electrical contact 150 and a second electrical contact 151, respectively, to deliver the photodetecting electrical signal.
The active optical member 120 is a photodetecting area provided above the layer 111, on the area C. It is thus situated at a height h, above high portions pa, pc of the profile hI(x) (
In practice, the corresponding optical structure needs then two succeeding etching operations, a first etching to a depth hg1=hc−ht, throughout the surface of the doped semi-conductor layer, except inside the area C. Then, a second etching to a depth hg2=ht−hd is carried out according to the drawing of the unit pattern ME.
More precisely, in the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
Since layer 111 forms a layer contacting the photodetecting area 120, then metal layer 112 forms a corresponding electrical contact 150.
A doped semi-conductor layer 130 is provided on the photodetecting area 120, to form a second layer contacting this area 120. This layer 130 is covered with the metal layer 113, which provides another electrical contact 151. The photodetecting signal of the device is obtained across the terminals of both electrical contacts 150 and 151.
In practice, a dielectric layer 140 is provided to laterally isolate the photodetecting area 120 from the metal layer 113 and isolate the contacts 150 and 151.
Such a device has very interesting photodetecting qualities of an illumination L, because the photodetecting area 120 is positioned above the localising area in x and y of the field. Indeed, the surface electrical field under an optical structure according to the invention decreases from the relief surface of the material of negative dielectric permeability to the material of positive dielectric permeability, being below. From the relief surface of the material of negative dielectric permeability and above, the electrical field has a constant value. In particular in the photodetecting area 120 of the structure, the values of the field are maxima, in virtue of the field concentrating effect area C. Therefore, the photodetecting area yields a stronger covering of the field. The detecting performance is improved. However, this is obtained at the expense of a little more complicated manufacturing, in particular with more etching steps. On the other hand, no proton implanting steps are required any more to produce a device as illustrated in
The optical structures used in the devices just described in relation to
The invention is also applicable to other types of photodetectors, like for example inter-band detectors or photoconductors based on material families containing Gallium Antimonide (GaSb) or Mercury Cadmium Tellurium (HgCdTe).
The optical structures according to the invention can be used in photodetectors whose detecting spectral domain is other than the medium infrared. In particular, it can be used in the microwave field (frequencies in the order of gigahertz), or far infrared field (frequencies in the order of terahertz) or further near infrared field.
The invention is also applicable to photosensitive matrices including a plurality of photodetectors each including an optical structure according to the invention, these photodetectors being disposed in rows and columns on a common support, according to the principles of making the photosensitive matrixes well known to those skilled in the art.
Another application of an optical structure to a semi-conductor device according to the invention relates to the emitters.
A first exemplary device provided with an optical structure according to the invention, to emit a luminous beam in a given operating spectral beam, for example the medium infrared, is illustrated in
A quantum cascade emitter of the state of the art includes semi-conducting layers, mainly a substrate and an active layer, and a metal layer on the active layer. The active layer forms a waveguide from which is extracted, through the wafer, the luminous wave generated under the effect of the electrical excitation applied by the metal layer. A feature of such a device is as follows: the active layer emits with a bias perpendicular to the plane of the semi-conducting layers. For this reason, extracting the luminous beam is difficult.
In the invention, the semi-conducting structure of such an emitter and an optical structure according to the invention are combined. Namely, the metal layer is replaced by an optical structure according to the invention, including a metal layer having a relief surface according to the invention contacting the semi-conducting structure which forms the medium of positive dielectric permeability εr.
The laser mode emitted by a quantum emitter is indeed a TM mode. This mode is compatible with surface plasmons. Accordingly, it is possible to use an optical structure according to the invention with such an emitter.
In particular, the effect of this combining is to improve the optical field localising and to allow a vertical extraction of the laser beam, through the substrate surface, which solves the extraction related problems.
An embodiment of such a quantum cascade emitter is illustrated in
The emitting active area 210 is a layer allowing an optical gain. For example, it is an active structure of quantum cascade laser, such as for example described in patent EP 1466393.
The optical structure 220 at least includes a first layer 221 semi-conducting doped transparent to the wavelength of emission and a second metal layer 222 non transparent to the wavelength of emission. The first layer has a relief surface along a profile h(x) according to the invention, profile that can be of the type hI(x) or hII(x). The second layer 221 covers this relief surface. The layer 221 is etched so that the layer 222 contacts the emitting active area 210, possibly enters the active area as illustrated in
Semi-conducting materials used in the device are typically materials of family III-V.
The profile of the relief surface is more particularly defined by its parameters a, b, c, d, hg for the amplitude α of the first harmonic f(x,y, Λ) to be far less than the amplitude p of the second harmonic g(x, y, ½Λ), so as to favour localising. Coupling must indeed not be too high, otherwise the laser effect disappears. More generally, these amplitudes are chosen to obtain the laser effect.
The parameter hg is more particularly chosen depending on the length of the device considered and on the available gain. It is optimised resorting to an accurate electromagnetic modelling in a well known manner.
Thus, the operating principle is the detection of the field and the vertical emission of a luminous radiation L as illustrated in
To take the example of a laser, we can obtain with only one step more than the prior art:
The optical structure according to the invention can also be used in the case of a device using one or more strongly doped layers (Plasmon enhanced) as illustrated in
Such a device is used in particular to produce quantum cascade lasers operating in the medium infrared. Localising is improved.
Since the technological implementation is simple, it is applicable to produce a plurality of emitters on a same support, for producing a network, as schematically illustrated in
The invention is not limited to an emission in the infrared spectral domain, but is applicable to a wider spectral domain, depending in particular on materials used, and on the structure of the device.
In particular, it is applicable in the field of generating terahertz waves (that is at a wavelength between 70 and 300 micrometers), as illustrated in
According to the state of the art, generating terahertz waves can be obtained through optical frequency converting, by means of a non linear medium of 2nd order, including a non linear optical layer, in which a non linear waveguide is produced, with a material having a higher optical index. This waveguide is illuminated at one end, through the wafer of the device, by two laser sources providing two optical frequencies ω1 and ω2. The non linear interaction of both optical frequencies causes a terahertz wave at the frequency difference to be emitted. The waveguide must be a medium transparent in the near infrared and terahertz domain. In one example, semi-conductors of family III-V are for example used such as growing GaAs [1 0 0], both optical frequencies of the near infrared domain being biased along 0x and the terahertz wave being biased along 0y (TM mode).
In practice the structure of the device must enable guided Terahertz mode and optical frequencies to be phase matched. The phase matching frequency does not depend on inherent properties of the non linear material. For example, with GaAs, the phase matching is only possible with optical frequencies well defined around 1.2 micrometers. For these reasons, the choice for laser sources is limited.
Localising the field mainly depends on the index contrast, and growing possibilities of materials.
In practice, there are problems for localising the generated wave because the possibilities of index contrast given by semi-conductors are limiting, like is in particular the growing technology of semi-conducting materials.
This aspect can be improved by using doped layers on either side of the waveguide. A structure generating terahertz wave through index contrast according to the state of the art thus includes a semi-conducting membrane coated with metal on both faces. Such a structure is particularly delicate to be produced, and gives rise to a problem for extracting the light: indeed both metal faces result in an impedance mismatching between the active layer field, and the free space, and hence in terahertz wave reflection issues. This mismatching problem between the waveguide and the free space makes the extraction more difficult.
By using an optical structure according to the invention, the phase matching condition can be satisfied more independently from the properties of the materials, by exploiting the periodicity induced dispersion. Moreover, containment and extraction issues are solved: localising the field near the metal surface of the optical structure solves the light containment issue: containment is no longer provided by the index contrast but by the geometry of the optical structure, the containment degree being controlled by the amplitude of the second harmonic corresponding to the profile of the structure. And a second metal layer is no longer needed. Finally, the terahertz wave is emitted through the surface.
In the invention, an optical structure according to the invention is applied to such an emitter (
We can thus obtain a device whose medium positive dielectric permeability is the semi-conducting structure of the emitter.
This structure mainly includes an active optical member, formed by a non linear material layer 300, transparent to wavelengths of the near infrared and terahertz domains. This layer includes a non linear semi-conducting waveguide 301 also transparent to wavelengths of the near infrared and terahertz domains.
Non linear semi-conducting materials are typically chosen from family III-V such as GaAs, or AlGaAs for example. For the waveguide 301, one of the crystallographic axes [110] or [−110] is oriented along 0x.
The waveguide is formed by a layer of a material whose positive dielectric permeability is higher than that of the active layer 300.
The optical structure is disposed on the layer 300. The optical structure is in the example identical to that seen in
The thus formed device allows a vertical emission of a terahertz wave LTHZ generated by conversion of optical frequency, in response to an illumination of the waveguide along the 0x axis under two optical frequencies ω1 and ω2 different from the near infrared domain.
The device performance is improved. In particular, the optical structure enables to obtain:
In a more detailed exemplary embodiment, as illustrated in
The profile of the guide mode in the near infrared, written as IR in the figure, and that of the terahertz mode, written as THZ have been represented.
We can obtain a terahertz radiation LTHZ that vertically exits by the surface of the substrate 200.
A terahertz emitting system including a series of devices of this kind, aligned on a same substrate can be considered.
Another application field of an optical structure according to the invention, relates to electron sources, and more particularly sources using cold cathodes with emitting tips. In this context, the cathode is of the field emission type. According to the state of the art, each emissive area of the cathode comes as a cone (for example of tungsten) or as a tip (for example a carbon nanotube or a metal or semi-conducting nanowire). Such a cathode includes a great number of emitting tips, from which the corresponding structure is called FEA, acronym for Field Emission Array.
A corresponding electron source includes a FEA cathode and a gate spaced apart from each other (typically from 1 to a hundred μm), and between which prevails a more or less high vacuum. A voltage applied to this gate, in the order of some tens to some hundreds of volts, enables an external electrical field E strong at the surface of each tip of the cathode to be created. The cathode emits a constant electron flow, which is extracted therefrom by the external electrical field.
A modulation of the voltage or of the electrical field E causes a modulation of the current density J of electrons emitted according to the Fowler-Nordheim's law:
It is interesting for several applications to generate this modulation of emission through an optical control. For this, it has been provided (French patent 04 13340) as schematically illustrated in
In the case of tips with nanometric diameter at the top, it has also been provided another configuration, according to which the electrical field of the optical wave in the surroundings close to the tip is used to have a direct influence on the “field emission” of the electrons from the top of the tip, thanks to the non linear characteristic of the field emission process (optical rectification effect). By modulating the illumination intensity, it is possible to modulate the density of the current emitted (configuration 3). Refer for example to the article by M. Hagmann edited in IEEE Transaction on Microwave Theory and Techniques review, Vol. 52 no 10, October 2004.
Finally, another configuration is provided in this article (configuration 4), according to which the beating of two optical waves of wavelengths very close to each other is used to make up a resultant optical wave whose amplitude is modulated at a frequency near THz, and to cause this wave to interact with the emitting tips as just said. The purpose is then to make up electron beams modulated at a frequency THz to enable amplifier tubes or power oscillator to be produced in this frequency range.
In the optically controlled devices just described, a major part of the control luminous energy is lost in the case of a uniform illumination, because the photosensitive members are small and spaced apart. On the other hand, in the case of direct modulation of emission by the electrical field of the optical wave (configurations 3 and 4), the illumination usually in quasi-normal incidence, corresponds to an electrical field of the optical wave perpendicular to the axis of the tips, being an inefficient orientation to have an influence on the field emission.
The invention provides a solution to these different problems.
A configuration of a field emission device including an optical structure according to the invention is illustrated in
The medium of positive dielectric permeability εr is made up with vacuum (Cr=1).
An optical structure according to the invention is used, with a layer 500 of negative dielectric permeability having a relief surface contacting the vacuum (Cr=1).
The active optical member herein is an electron emitter, typically an emitting tip.
An emitting tip 510 is placed on the relief surface of the layer 500, in the localising area in x and in y of the electrical field, that is in the area C, or when it has a null length (profile hII(x)), in a region close to the plane of symmetry.
We can obtain, through the coupling effect of the incident wave to a surface mode, a re-orientation of the electrical field of the optical wave, which becomes parallel to the axis of the emitting tip.
The invention enables the modulation of electron emission in the four known configurations 1 to 4 described above to be drastically increased. More precisely, by using an optical structure according to the invention, there can be obtained the excitation of an optical field biased along the axis of the tips from a beam with a quasi-normal incidence. Optical modulation is thus very easy to be implemented in the electron source device
More precisely, as illustrated in
The emitting tips 510 are oriented along −0y. These tips can be partly or totally made of photoconducting material, as illustrated in
These tips are disposed on the layer 500, in the field localising area in x and y.
Preferably, they are disposed close to the point of maximum amplitude of the component Ey of the field. This can vary depending on the profile of the relief surface, and of the parameters a, b, c, d, hg of the unit pattern.
It is shown that a location of the tip 510 at a distance along 0x in the order of Λ/4 on any side of the plane of symmetry π yields a good performance. There can also be provided a pair of tips 520, with a tip at a same distance on either side from the plane π, and preferably at a distance close to Λ/4 from this plane, as illustrated in the configuration shown in
Since the structure is invariant along 0z, the tips 510, or pairs of tips 520 are disposed, aligned along 0z (
Further, it can be produced a matrix of electron emitters, with as many optical structures 5001, 5002 . . . as rows of desired tips 5101, 5102, or pairs of tips 5201, 5202, as schematically illustrated in
In an alternative of the invention, under the location of the tips, there is a photoconducting device (PIN or else) directly on the substrate which can then be advantageously a very doped semi-conductor, according to the configuration of the
An advantageous implementation of the invention includes using nano-emitters such as semi-conducting nanowires or nanotubes as electron emitting tips. these nano-emitters have indeed a very favourable shape factor, which results in a local electrical field at the end of these nano-emitters being increased by at least two orders of magnitude, with respect to the average field. This allows an efficient electron emission, under weak electrical fields applied.
In an advantageous embodiment, the profile of the structure is parametered so as to be very resonant. This strong resonance enables a surface electromagnetic field whose amplitude can be higher by at least one order of magnitude than the amplitude of the incident optical field, to be obtained. This implies a contribution to the electron current emission that is at least of two orders of magnitude.
Advantageously, through the optical rectification effect, the optical structure according to the invention also enables a beating signal between two optical frequencies to be converted into a modulation in THz domain of the electron emission. The electron source then includes two optical sources, typically two laser sources emitting at near frequencies.
According to an advantageous aspect of the invention, since the optical structure enables the electrical field in the vicinity of nano-emitters to be increased, the optical intensity is also increased, typically of a factor from 100 to 1000. As a consequence, the photoconductivity of the nano-emitter is modulated.
In a practical exemplary embodiment, a field emission device according to the invention could be made the following way.
A substrate is provided, that can be a semi-conducting or metal material. The optical structure according to the invention is made. For example, a layer of dielectric material is laid down, and then etched according to the suitable profile. Then, the metal layer is laid down. For example, the metal is gold.
On the optical structure thus made, a resin layer is laid down, and etched at the location intended for each emitting tip 510, so as to release this area to lay down a material compatible with the emitting tip therein. In one example, if the tip is a carbon nanotube, a diffusion barrier is made, typically a TiN deposit, and a catalyst (Ni, Co, Fe . . . ) on the fault area. Then, the carbon nanotube can be grown through CVD.
This tip can also be a semi-conducting nanowire (or a plurality of nanowires). This tip is laid down by any suitable means according to the state of the art, on the fault area, on which a material compatible with the nanowire had been laid down beforehand.
The invention that has been described is not limited to the only structures and applications that have been given by way of examples.
It will be readily seen by one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention fulfils all of the objects set forth above. After reading the foregoing specification, one of ordinary skill in the art will be able to affect various changes, substitutions of equivalents and various aspects of the invention as broadly disclosed herein. It is therefore intended that the protection granted hereon be limited only by definition contained in the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0511463 | Nov 2005 | FR | national |
The present Application is based on International Application No. PCT/EP2006/068334, filed on Nov. 10, 2006, which in turn corresponds to French Application No. 05 11463, filed on Nov. 10, 2005, and priority is hereby claimed under 35 USC §119 based on these applications. Each of these applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety into the present application.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/068334 | 11/10/2006 | WO | 00 | 5/7/2008 |