Graphene has emerged as a promising material for optoelectronics due to its potential for ultrafast and broad-band photodetection. The photoresponse of graphene junctions is characterized by two competing photocurrent generation mechanisms: a conventional photovoltaic effect and a more dominant hot-carrier-assisted photothermoelectric (PTE) effect. The PTE effect is understood to rely on variations in the Seebeck coefficient through the graphene doping profile. A second PTE effect can occur across a homogeneous graphene channel in the presence of an electronic temperature gradient. Here, we study the latter effect facilitated by strongly localised plasmonic heating of graphene carriers in the presence of nanostructured electrical contacts resulting in electronic temperatures of the order of 2000 K. At certain conditions, the plasmon-induced PTE photocurrent contribution can be isolated. In this regime, the device effectively operates as a sensitive electronic thermometer and as such represents an enabling technology for development of hot carrier based plasmonic devices.
The mobility and carrier concentration of a number of InSb-based modulation-doped quantum well heterostructures are examined over a range of temperatures between 4.5 and 300 K. Wide well ͑30 nm͒ and narrow well ͑15 nm͒ structures are measured. The temperature dependent mobilities are considered within a scattering model that incorporates polar optical and acoustic phonon scatterings, interface roughness scattering, and scattering from charged impurities both in the three-dimensional background and within a distributed "quasitwo-dimensional" doping layer. Room temperature mobilities as high as 51 000 cm 2 / V s are reported for heterostructures with a carrier concentration of 5.8ϫ 10 11 cm −2 , while low-temperature mobility ͑below 40 K͒ reaches 248 000 cm 2 / V s for a carrier concentration of 3.9ϫ 10 11 cm −2. A Schrödinger-Poisson model is used to calculate band structures in the material and is shown to accurately predict carrier concentrations over the whole temperature range. Low-temperature mobility is shown to be dominated by remote ionized impurity scattering in wide well samples and by a combination of ionized impurity and interface roughness scattering in narrow well samples.
Hybrid plasmonic metal-graphene systems are emerging as a class of optical metamaterials that facilitate strong light-matter interactions and are of potential importance for hot carrier graphene-based light harvesting and active plasmonic applications. Here we use femtosecond pump-probe measurements to study the near-field interaction between graphene and plasmonic gold nanodisk resonators. By selectively probing the plasmon-induced hot carrier dynamics in samples with tailored graphene-gold interfaces, we show that plasmon-induced hot carrier generation in the graphene is dominated by direct photoexcitation with minimal contribution from charge transfer from the gold. The strong near-field interaction manifests as an unexpected and long-lived extrinsic optical anisotropy. The observations are explained by the action of highly localized plasmon-induced hot carriers in the graphene on the subresonant polarizability of the disk resonator. Because localized hot carrier generation in graphene can be exploited to drive electrical currents, plasmonic metal-graphene nanostructures present opportunities for novel hot carrier device concepts.
We report measurements of the electron g-factor in InSb quantum wells using the coincidence technique, polarization transition, and temperature-dependent resistivity. All three methods show that there is a giant enhancement of the spin slitting which is proportional to the spin polarization. Electron Zeeman energies as high as 51 meV are measured leading to the conclusion that the additional contribution to the spin splitting is of order 30 meV, more than ten times larger than expected from conventional theories.
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