Abstract

Gallium nitride (GaN) nanowire, as a type of wide bandgap nanomaterial, has attracted considerable interest because of its outstanding physicochemical properties and applications in energy storage and photoelectric devices. In this study, we prepared GaN nanowires via a facile chemical vapor deposition method and investigated their nonlinear absorption responses ranging from ultraviolet to near-infrared in the z-scan technology under irradiation by picosecond laser pulses. The experiment revealed that GaN nanowires exhibit remarkable nonlinear absorption characteristics attributed to their wide bandgap and nanostructure, including saturable absorption and reverse saturable absorption. When compared to bulk GaN crystals, the nanowires provide a richer and more potent set of nonlinear optical effects. Furthermore, we conducted an analysis of the corresponding electronic transition processes associated with photon absorption. Under high peak power density laser excitation, two-photon absorption or three-photon absorption dominate, with maximum modulation depths of 73.6%, 74.9%, 63.1% and 64.3% at 266 nm, 355 nm, 532 nm, and 1064 nm, respectively, corresponding to absorption coefficients of 0.22 cm/GW, 0.28 cm/GW, 0.08 cm/GW, and 2.82 ×10−4 cm3/GW2. At lower peak energy densities, GaN nanowires demonstrate rare and excellent saturation absorption characteristics at wavelength of 355 nm due to interband transitions, while saturable absorption is also observed at 532 nm and 1064 nm due to band tail absorption. The modulation depths are 85.2%, 41.9%, and 13.7% for 355 nm, 532 nm, and 1064 nm, corresponding to saturation intensities of 3.39 GW/cm2, 5.58 GW/cm2 and 14.13 GW/cm2. This indicates that GaN nanowires can be utilized as broadband optical limiters and high-performance pulse laser modulating devices, particularly for scarce ultraviolet optical limiters, and saturable absorbers for ultraviolet and visible lasers. Furthermore, our study demonstrates the application potential of wide bandgap nanomaterials in nonlinear optical devices.

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