Spontaneous Hot-Electron Light Emission from Electron-Fed Optical Antennas

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TitreSpontaneous Hot-Electron Light Emission from Electron-Fed Optical Antennas
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuteursBuret M, Uskov AV, Dellinger J, Cazier N, Mennemanteuil M-M, Berthelot J, Smetanin IV, Protsenko IE, Colas-des-Francs G, Bouhelier A
JournalNANO LETTERS
Volume15
Pagination5811-5818
Date PublishedSEP
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1530-6984
Mots-cléselectromigration, hot electrons, Optical antennas, spontaneous emission, tunnel junction
Résumé

Nanoscale electronics and photonics are among the most promising research areas providing functional nanocomponents for data transfer and signal processing. By adopting metal-based optical antennas as a disruptive technological vehicle, we demonstrate that these two device-generating technologies can be interfaced to create an electronically driven self-emitting unit. This nanoscale plasmonic transmitter operates by injecting electrons in a contacted tunneling antenna feedgap. Under certain operating conditions, we show that the antenna enters a highly nonlinear regime in which the energy of the emitted photons exceeds the quantum limit imposed by the applied bias. We propose a model based upon the spontaneous emission of hot electrons that correctly reproduces the experimental findings. The electron-fed optical antennas described here are critical devices for interfacing electrons and photons, enabling thus the development of optical transceivers for on-chip wireless broadcasting of information at the nanoscale.

DOI10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b01861