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      Dynamic Absorption Enhancement and Equivalent Resonant Circuit Modeling of Tunable Graphene-Metal Hybrid Antenna

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          Abstract

          Plasmonic antennas are attractive optical components of the optoelectronic devices, operating in the far-infrared regime for sensing and imaging applications. However, low optical absorption hinders its potential applications, and their performance is limited due to fixed resonance frequency. In this article, a novel gate tunable graphene-metal hybrid plasmonic antenna with stacking configuration is proposed and investigated to achieve tunable performance over a broad range of frequencies with enhanced absorption characteristics. The hybrid graphene-metal antenna geometry is built up with a hexagon radiator that is supported by the Al 2O 3 insulator layer and graphene reflector. This stacked structure is deposited in the high resistive Si wafer substrate, and the hexagon radiator itself is a sandwich structure, which is composed of gold hexagon structure and two multilayer graphene stacks. The proposed antenna characteristics i.e., tunability of frequency, the efficiency corresponding to characteristics modes, and the tuning of absorption spectra, are evaluated by full-wave numerical simulations. Besides, the unity absorption peak that was realized through the proposed geometry is sensitive to the incident angle of TM-polarized incidence waves, which can flexibly shift the maxima of the absorption peak from 30 THz to 34 THz. Finally, an equivalent resonant circuit model for the investigated antenna based on the simulations results is designed to validate the antenna performance. Parametric analysis of the proposed antenna is carried out through altering the geometric parameters and graphene parameters in the Computer Simulation Technology (CST) studio. This clearly shows that the proposed antenna has a resonance frequency at 33 THz when the graphene sheet Fermi energy is increased to 0.3 eV by applying electrostatic gate voltage. The good agreement of the simulation and equivalent circuit model results makes the graphene-metal antenna suitable for the realization of far-infrared sensing and imaging device containing graphene antenna with enhanced performance.

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          Energy Band-Gap Engineering of Graphene Nanoribbons

          We investigate electronic transport in lithographically patterned graphene ribbon structures where the lateral confinement of charge carriers creates an energy gap near the charge neutrality point. Individual graphene layers are contacted with metal electrodes and patterned into ribbons of varying widths and different crystallographic orientations. The temperature dependent conductance measurements show larger energy gaps opening for narrower ribbons. The sizes of these energy gaps are investigated by measuring the conductance in the nonlinear response regime at low temperatures. We find that the energy gap scales inversely with the ribbon width, thus demonstrating the ability to engineer the band gap of graphene nanostructures by lithographic processes.
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            Tunable infrared plasmonic devices using graphene/insulator stacks.

            The collective oscillation of carriers--the plasmon--in graphene has many desirable properties, including tunability and low loss. However, in single-layer graphene, the dependence on carrier concentration of both the plasmonic resonance frequency and magnitude is relatively weak, limiting its applications in photonics. Here, we demonstrate transparent photonic devices based on graphene/insulator stacks, which are formed by depositing alternating wafer-scale graphene sheets and thin insulating layers, then patterning them together into photonic-crystal-like structures. We show experimentally that the plasmon in such stacks is unambiguously non-classical. Compared with doping in single-layer graphene, distributing carriers into multiple graphene layers effectively enhances the plasmonic resonance frequency and magnitude, which is different from the effect in a conventional semiconductor superlattice and is a direct consequence of the unique carrier density scaling law of the plasmonic resonance of Dirac fermions. Using patterned graphene/insulator stacks, we demonstrate widely tunable far-infrared notch filters with 8.2 dB rejection ratios and terahertz linear polarizers with 9.5 dB extinction ratios. An unpatterned stack consisting of five graphene layers shields 97.5% of electromagnetic radiation at frequencies below 1.2 THz. This work could lead to the development of transparent mid- and far-infrared photonic devices such as detectors, modulators and three-dimensional metamaterial systems.
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              Active tunable absorption enhancement with graphene nanodisk arrays.

              If not for its inherently weak optical absorption at visible and infrared wavelengths, graphene would show exceptional promise for optoelectronic applications. Here we show that by nanopatterning a graphene layer into an array of closely packed graphene nanodisks, its absorption efficiency can be increased from less than 3% to 30% in the infrared region of the spectrum. We examine the dependence of the enhanced absorption on nanodisk size and interparticle spacing. By incorporating graphene nanodisk arrays into an active device, we demonstrate that this enhanced absorption efficiency is voltage-tunable, indicating strong potential for nanopatterned graphene as an active medium for infrared electro-optic devices.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Sensors (Basel)
                Sensors (Basel)
                sensors
                Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
                MDPI
                1424-8220
                04 June 2020
                June 2020
                : 20
                : 11
                : 3187
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS, Perak 32610, Malaysia; illani.nawi@ 123456utp.edu.my (I.N.); muhammad_17000796@ 123456utp.edu.my (M.J.); muhammad_18003606@ 123456utp.edu.my (M.A.S.); saeed_19001716@ 123456utp.edu.my (S.A.M.)
                [2 ]Department of Information Technology, BRI Institute of Technology & Business, Jakarta 12550, Indonesia; gunawan.witjaksono@ 123456bri-institute.ac.id
                [3 ]Center for Photonics and Nanoelectronics, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Lehigh University, 7 Asa Drive, Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA; tansu@ 123456lehigh.edu
                [4 ]Department of Electrical Communication Engineering, University of Engineering and Technology, Peshawar 25120, Pakistan; m.i.khattak@ 123456uetpeshawar.edu.pk
                Author notes
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9677-7644
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4655-938X
                Article
                sensors-20-03187
                10.3390/s20113187
                7308850
                32512718
                856cac4b-cd4e-405c-9c86-81576b33964c
                © 2020 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 03 March 2020
                : 18 March 2020
                Categories
                Article

                Biomedical engineering
                plasmonic,graphene,terahertz,optical antenna,surface plasmons,tunability
                Biomedical engineering
                plasmonic, graphene, terahertz, optical antenna, surface plasmons, tunability

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