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Sandia creates GaAs-based nano-material for mixing light waves

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Optical metamixer mixed two laser pulses to produce 11 waves of light ranging from the near infrared to ultraviolet

Changing the colour of a laser has many uses from discovering hidden archeology sites in dense forests and detecting signs of extraterrestrial life in the air to potentially speeding up and increasing the capacity of long-distance communication via fibre-optics networks. Now Sandia National Laboratories has developed a new material that could produce tiny multicoloured lasers switchable in an instant.

Research on the new light-mixing metamaterial was published in Nature Communications. The work was led by Sandia Senior Scientist Igal Brener along with collaborators at Friedrich Schiller University Jena. The paper reports how a metamaterial made up of an array of GaAs nanocylinders mixed two laser pulses of near infrared light to produce 11 waves of light ranging in colour from the near infrared, through the colours of the rainbow, to ultraviolet.

A metamaterial is a material made up of tiny, repeating structures that interact with electromagnetic waves in ways conventional materials cannot. The structures are much smaller than the wavelength of light they are designed to manipulate. They are somewhat similar to the natural structures that give blue morpho butterfly wings their spectacular iridescence. The wings have scales with tiny repeating structures, which reflect light to produce the blue colour.

GaAs bends light strongly, which is essential for this kind of metamaterial, said Brener. Each nanocylinder is about 500nm tall with a diameter of about 400nm. They are laid out in a square pattern about 840nm apart from one another.

Current ways to mix light, such as those used for green laser pointers, use specially crafted crystals to perfectly align the light waves to allow mixing, said Brener. This is called phase matching. Because of physical rules, each crystal can only efficiently match the phases of one colour of incoming light to produce one different colour of light. Sandia's metamaterial works in a completely different manner.

Instead, the team selected two near infrared lasers with wavelengths tuned to the metamaterial's resonant frequencies, or the wavelengths that bounce around inside the nanocylinders best, said Polina Vabishchevich, a Sandia postdoctoral appointee and first author on the paper. The light from these two lasers - call them frequencies A and B - mix to produce 11 colours from different mixing products including A+A, A+B, B+B, A+A+B, and A+B+B, among other complex mixing products.

"With this tiny device and two laser pulses we were able to generate 11 new colours at the same time, which is so cool," said Vabishchevich. "We don't need to change angles or match phases."

The metamaterial was made using processes borrowed from semiconductor device fabrication. This fabrication was conducted at several Sandia facilities including Sandia's Microsystems Engineering, Sciences, and Applications complex and the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, a Department of Energy Office of Science user facility jointly operated with Los Alamos National Laboratory.

"If we didn't have access to the instrumentation we have at Sandia, this research would have been impossible," said Brener. "Without CINT's specialised femtosecond laser system, it would have been very challenging to perform these measurements." A femtosecond is one millionth of a billionth of a second and femtosecond lasers produce powerful light.

Though the conversion efficiency for the optical metamixer is very low - for example the resulting red-orange light is very weak compared to the incoming light - Brener believes the efficiency can be greatly improved with further work, perhaps by stacking multiple layers of metamaterial.

Many different kinds of chemical and biological research, from using specialised microscopes to study how diseases evade the immune system to studying the chemistry of combustion to improve vehicle efficiency, require light at specific wavelengths. This optical metamixer could convert light from lasers to a new wavelength where a laser might not be available or allow researchers to switch from one wavelength to another without having to buy a different laser, said Brener.

Switchable, tunable lasers could also be useful in biological, chemical and atmospheric research; remote sensing; fibre-optics-based communication; even quantum optics.

The research team included collaborators from Friedrich Schiller University Jena; John Reno, a CINT materials scientist who grew the semiconductors; Sandia physicist Mike Sinclair, who was involved in the modeling and theory; and two former Sandia researchers Sheng Liu and Gordon Keeler.

This work was funded by US DOE Office of Science.

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