Scalable and Tunable Periodic Graphene Nanohole Arrays for Mid-Infrared Plasmonics

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Abstract

Despite its great potential for a wide variety of devices, especially mid-infrared biosensors and photodetectors, graphene plasmonics is still confined to academic research. A major reason is the fact that, so far, expensive and low-throughput lithography techniques are needed to fabricate graphene nanostructures. Here, we report for the first time a detailed experimental study on electrostatically tunable graphene nanohole array surfaces with periods down to 100 nm, showing clear plasmonic response in the range ∼1300-1600 cm-1, which can be fabricated by a scalable nanoimprint technique. Such large area plasmonic nanostructures are suitable for industrial applications, for example, surface-enhanced infrared absorption (SEIRA) sensing, as they combine easy design, extreme field confinement, and the possibility to excite multiple plasmon modes enabling multiband sensing, a feature not readily available in nanoribbons or other localized resonant structures.

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Gopalan, K. K., Paulillo, B., Mackenzie, D. M. A., Rodrigo, D., Bareza, N., Whelan, P. R., … Pruneri, V. (2018). Scalable and Tunable Periodic Graphene Nanohole Arrays for Mid-Infrared Plasmonics. Nano Letters, 18(9), 5913–5918. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b02613

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