Graphene's nonlinear-optical physics revealed through exponentially growing self-phase modulation

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Abstract

Graphene is considered a record-performance nonlinear-optical material on the basis of numerous experiments. The observed strong nonlinear response ascribed to the refractive part of graphene's electronic third-order susceptibility χ (3) cannot, however, be explained using the relatively modest χ (3) value theoretically predicted for the 2D material. Here we solve this long-standing paradox and demonstrate that, rather than χ (3)-based refraction, a complex phenomenon which we call saturable photoexcited-carrier refraction is at the heart of nonlinear-optical interactions in graphene such as self-phase modulation. Saturable photoexcited-carrier refraction is found to enable self-phase modulation of picosecond optical pulses with exponential-like bandwidth growth along graphene-covered waveguides. Our theory allows explanation of these extraordinary experimental results both qualitatively and quantitatively. It also supports the graphene nonlinearities measured in previous self-phase modulation and self-(de)focusing (Z-scan) experiments. This work signifies a paradigm shift in the understanding of 2D-material nonlinearities and finally enables their full exploitation in next-generation nonlinear-optical devices.

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Vermeulen, N., Castelló-Lurbe, D., Khoder, M., Pasternak, I., Krajewska, A., Ciuk, T., … Van Erps, J. (2018). Graphene’s nonlinear-optical physics revealed through exponentially growing self-phase modulation. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05081-z

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