Heterodyne mixing of millimetre electromagnetic waves and sub-THz sound in a semiconductor device article

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Abstract

We demonstrate heterodyne mixing of a 94 GHz millimetre wave photonic signal, supplied by a Gunn diode oscillator, with coherent acoustic waves of frequency ~100 GHz, generated by pulsed laser excitation of a semiconductor surface. The mixing takes place in a millimetre wave Schottky diode and the intermediate frequency electrical signal is in the 1-12 GHz range. The mixing process preserves all the spectral content in the acoustic signal that falls within the intermediate frequency bandwidth. Therefore this technique may find application in high-frequency acoustic spectroscopy measurements, exploiting the nanometre wavelength of sub-THz sound. The result also points the way to exploiting acoustoelectric effects in photonic devices working at sub-THz and THz frequencies, which could provide functionalities at these frequencies, e.g. acoustic wave filtering, that are currently in widespread use at lower (GHz) frequencies.

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Heywood, S. L., Glavin, B. A., Beardsley, R. P., Akimov, A. V., Carr, M. W., Norman, J., … Kent, A. J. (2016). Heterodyne mixing of millimetre electromagnetic waves and sub-THz sound in a semiconductor device article. Scientific Reports, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep30396

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