4.8 Article

Plasmonic Terahertz Devices and Sensors Based on Carbon Electronics

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c22411

Keywords

terahertz; carbon materials; sensors; plasmonics; nanofilm

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Researchers have developed an alternative approach to achieve tunable terahertz photonic devices by postprocessing nanothickness graphene films. These films have widely tunable conductivity and enable versatile THz applications, such as high-performance electronics, photonics, and sensors. The researchers successfully detected diphenylamine using this method, demonstrating its potential in molecular sensing.
Tunable terahertz (THz) photonic devices are imperative in a wide range of applications ranging from THz signal modulation to molecular sensing. One of the currently prevailing methods is based on arrays of metallic or dielectric resonators integrated with functional materials in response to an external stimulus, in which for the purpose of sensing the external stimuli may introduce inadvertent undesirable effects into the target samples to be measured. Here we developed an alternative approach by postprocessing nanothickness macro-assembled graphene (nMAG) films with widely tunable THz conductivity, enabling versatile solid-state THz devices and sensors, showing multifunctional nMAG-based applications. The THz conductivities of free-standing nMAGs showed a broad range from 1.2 x 103 S/m in reduced graphene oxide before annealing to 4.0 x 106 S/m in a nMAG film annealed at 2800 degrees C. We fabricated nMAG/dielectric/metal and nMAG/dielectric/nMAG THz Salisbury absorbers with broad reflectance ranging from 0% to 80%. The highly conductive nMAG films enabled THz metasurfaces for sensing applications. Taking advantage of the resonant field enhancement arising from the plasmonic metasurface structures and the strong interactions between analyte molecules and nMAG films, we successfully detected diphenylamine with a limit of detection of 4.2 pg. Those wafer-scale nMAG films present promising potential in high-performance THz electronics, photonics, and sensors.

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