We report on the role of ferroelectricity on the physical and electro-optic parameters in suspensions of nanoparticles in cyclohexane based, fluorinated nematic liquid crystals. The dielectric and elastic constants, response time, and viscosity of the suspensions were analyzed experimentally and compared with the undoped samples. Our study shows a decrease in the splay elastic constant and an increase in the dielectric constants, together with an increase in the average rotational viscosity.
We present a two-quantum well THz intersubband laser operating up to 192 K. The structure has been optimized with a non-equilibrium Green's function model. The result of this optimization was confirmed experimentally by growing, processing and measuring a number of proposed designs. At high temperature (T > 200 K), the simulations indicate that lasing fails due to a combination of electron-electron scattering, thermal backfilling, and, most importantly, re-absorption coming from broadened states.Terahertz quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) 1 are interesting candidates for a wide variety of potential applications 2,3 . However, to date, their operation is limited to ∼200 K 4 and the necessity of cryogenic cooling hinders a widespread use of these devices. In the last decade, significant scientific effort has been directed towards identifying the main temperaturedegrading mechanisms 5-8 , as well as finding optimized QCL designs 9-14 . The degrading mechanisms include thermal backfilling 3,15 , thermally activated LO phonon emission [6][7][8]16 , increased broadening [17][18][19] , and carrier leakage into continuum states 20 . When numerically optimizing a design, it is important to take all of these effects into consideration, in order to ensure a close correspondence between the model and the real device. Combined with the fact that the optimization parameters are typically trade-offs for one another, the task is very complex. Here, typically simpler rate equation or density matrix models are used in order to more quickly sweep the parameter space 21-23 , while more advanced models, such as non-equilibrium Green's functions (NEGF) or Monte-Carlo, are used to validate and analyze the final designs 13,[24][25][26] . In contrast, in this work we will employ an advanced model directly at the optimization stage. Specifically, we shall use a NEGF model 27 , capable of accurately simulating experimental devices 13,26,28 and including the most general treatment of scattering, from all relevant processes.The goal of the optimization is to achieve the highest possible operating temperature. Thus, the gain of the active medium should be maximized at high lattice temperature, and simultaneously the external losses minimized. The key figures for gain are inversion, oscillator strength, and line width 29 . These are mainly controlled by the doping density, the energy difference E ex between the lower laser level ll and the extractor state e, and the width of the two barriers: the laser and injection barriers. Population inversion increases with doping, although a too high level promotes detrimental effects, such as electron-electron scattering. E ex , which is chosen to be close to the LO phonon resonance E LO in order to have a short ll lifetime, and the laser frequency ω are mainly determined by the well widths. The laser barrier width determines the oscillator strength, which at the same time affects inversion; a more vertical transition
Biomimetic, lamellar, and highly porous transition-metal carbide (MXene) embedded cellulose nanofiber (CNF) aerogels are assembled by a facile bidirectional freeze-drying approach. The biopolymer aerogels have large-scale, parallel-oriented micrometer-sized pores and show excellent mechanical strength and flexibility, tunable electrical properties, and low densities (2.7–20 mg/cm3). The CNF, MXene, and lamellar pores are efficiently utilized to endow the aerogels with exceptionally high birefringence in the terahertz (THz) regime. Birefringence values as high as 0.09–0.27 at 0.4 THz are achieved, which is comparable to most commercial THz birefringent materials such as liquid crystals, which suffer from fast disintegration, high cost, and complicated preparation processes. Empirical modeling for different MXene contents and an experimental comparison with silver nanowire or carbon nanotube embedded CNF aerogels suggest that the intrinsic conductivity and content of embedded nanomaterials, the aerogel porosity, and the lamellar cell walls can affect the optical properties such as the THz birefringence and absorption. The determination of optical anisotropy in the biopolymer aerogels lays a foundation for further exploration of ultralight, freestanding, and low-cost biomimetic porous architecture-based THz devices.
We report a thin film phase modulator employing organic nonlinear optical molecules, with an electro-optic bandwidth of 1.25 THz. The device acts as a polarization sensitive broadband Pockels medium for coherent electric field detection in a dual wavelength terahertz time-domain spectroscopy setup in the telecom band at 1550 nm. To increase the sensitivity, we combine a three-dimensional bow-tie antenna structure with strongly electro-optically active molecules JRD1 in poly(methyl methacrylate) supporting polymer. The antenna provides subwavelength field confinement of the terahertz wave with its waveguide gap with lateral dimensions of 2.2 μm × 5 μm × 4 μm. In the gap, the electric field is up to 150× stronger than in a diffraction limited space-time volume, such that an interaction length of only 4 μm suffices for the detection of fields below 10 V/m. This device is promising in the growing field of quantum optics in the terahertz, single photon terahertz detection, nonlinear imaging, and on-chip telecommunication.
We show that a hybrid LC-ferroelectric nanoparticle suspension of liquid crystal E7 doped with BaTiO3 nanoparticles leads to 10% increase in birefringence in the THz region of spectrum as compared to pure E7. Doped liquid crystals can be used to increase performance of THz modulators and waveplates. BaTiO3 nanoparticles used in the mixture were synthesised with the sol gel technique, and their refractive index has been measured in THz in powder form and in solution.
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