Abstract

Surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) offer a unique opportunity to overcome the diffraction limit of light. However, this opportunity comes at the cost of the strong absorption of the SPP field in a metal, which unavoidably limits the SPP propagation length to a few tens of micrometers in nanostructures with deep-subwavelength mode confinement. The only possibility to avoid the propagation losses is to compensate for them by optical gain in the adjacent active medium. Different approaches for surface plasmon amplification by stimulated emission of radiation have been proposed based on either optical or electrical pumping. However, each has its own disadvantages caused by the selected type of pumping scheme. Here, we study, for the first time, hybrid electro-optical pumping of active plasmonic waveguide structures, and by using comprehensive self-consistent numerical simulations, demonstrate that this hybrid approach can outperform both pure electrical pumping and pure optical pumping. The SPP modal gain is higher than under pure optical pumping, while one can precisely and locally adjust it by tuning the electric current, which allows the reduction of amplification noise and provides additional functionalities. We believe that our findings lay a solid foundation for the development of a new generation of active plasmonic devices and stimulate further research in this area.

Highlights

  • Surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs), which are surface electromagnetic waves at the interface between a metal and a dielectric, give a unique opportunity to design sub-diffraction limited optical components and devices [1,2]

  • The high density of electron-hole pairs created in InAs by electrical pumping and optical pumping gives the possibility to compensate for the SPP propagation losses and even amplify the SPP

  • We present a comprehensive study of surface plasmon polariton amplification under hybrid electro-optical pumping in Au/InAs metal-semiconductor structures

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Summary

Introduction

Surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs), which are surface electromagnetic waves at the interface between a metal and a dielectric, give a unique opportunity to design sub-diffraction limited optical components and devices [1,2]. Loss compensation is based on the stimulated emission of SPP quanta into the plasmonic mode from a gain medium, which can be pumped either optically [16,17,18,19,20] or electrically [21,22,23].

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