Abstract
The time it takes to switch on and off electric current determines the rate at which signals can be processed and sampled in modern information technology1-4. Field-effect transistors1-3,5,6 are able to control currents at frequencies of the order of or higher than 100 gigahertz, but electric interconnects may hamper progress towards reaching the terahertz (1012 hertz) range. All-optical injection of currents through interfering photoexcitation pathways7-10 or photoconductive switching of terahertz transients11-16 has made it possible to control electric current on a subpicosecond timescale in semiconductors. Insulators have been deemed unsuitable for both methods, because of the need for either ultraviolet light or strong fields, which induce slow damage or ultrafast breakdown17-20, respectively. Here we report the feasibility of electric signal manipulation in a dielectric. A few-cycle optical waveform reversibly increases-free from breakdown-the a.c. conductivity of amorphous silicon dioxide (fused silica) by more than 18 orders of magnitude within 1 femtosecond, allowing electric currents to be driven, directed and switched by the instantaneous light field. Our work opens the way to extending electronic signal processing and high-speed metrology into the petahertz (1015 hertz) domain. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Schiffrin, A., Paasch-Colberg, T., Karpowicz, N., Apalkov, V., Gerster, D., Mühlbrandt, S., … Krausz, F. (2013). Optical-field-induced current in dielectrics. Nature, 493(7430), 70–74. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11567
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