Juan Arocas
University of Burgundy
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Publication
Featured researches published by Juan Arocas.
Applied Physics Letters | 2011
Jean-Claude Weeber; Karim Hassan; A. Bouhelier; Gérard Colas-des-Francs; Juan Arocas; Laurent Markey; Alain Dereux
The thermo-electric detection of a waveguided surface plasmon traveling along one electrode of an in-plane integrated thermocouple is demonstrated. By using a particular design of the thermocouple, the thermo-electric signal due to the losses of the plasmon mode can be separated from the non-resonant heating of the waveguide. The thermo-electric signal associated with the plasmon propagation is proportional to the power coupled into the waveguided mode and exhibits a maximum at a distance from the excitation site depending on both the heat transfer coefficient of the system and the plasmon mode damping distance.
Optical Materials Express | 2018
Christian Vernoux; Yiting Chen; Laurent Markey; Cosmin Spârchez; Juan Arocas; Thorsten Felder; Marcel Neitz; Lars Brusberg; Jean Claude Weeber; Sergey I. Bozhevolnyi; Alain Dereux
We present the design, fabrication and characterization of long-range surface plasmon polariton waveguide arrays with materials, mainly silicones, carefully selected with the aim to be used as mechanically flexible single-mode optical interconnections, the so-called “plasmonic arc” working at 1.55µm. The fabricated plasmonic arcs show a TM/TE polarization ratio of ~25 dB. By using the cut-back method, the straight propagation loss at 1.55µm is estimated to 0.5-1 dB/mm and coupling loss to ~1-2 dB/facet after dicing. In the free-standing S-curved configuration, the bending loss of single cladding plasmonic arc is 2.2-2.8 dB/90° at bending radius 2.5 mm. For double cladding plasmonic arcs, it is decreased to 0.7-1.7 dB/90° for the same radius. The coupling loss with single-mode glass PCB waveguides is estimated to be 1.7 dB/interface in the best condition.
Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2018
Arindam Dasgupta; M. Buret; Nicolas Cazier; Marie-Maxime Mennemanteuil; Reinaldo Chacon; Kamal Hammani; Jean-Claude Weeber; Juan Arocas; Laurent Markey; Gérard Colas des Francs; Alexander V. Uskov; I. V. Smetanin; Alexandre Bouhelier
Background: Electrically controlled optical metal antennas are an emerging class of nanodevices enabling a bilateral transduction between electrons and photons. At the heart of the device is a tunnel junction that may either emit light upon injection of electrons or generate an electrical current when excited by a light wave. The current study explores a technological route for producing these functional units based upon the electromigration of metal constrictions. Results: We combine multiple nanofabrication steps to realize in-plane tunneling junctions made of two gold electrodes, separated by a sub-nanometer gap acting as the feedgap of an optical antenna. We electrically characterize the transport properties of the junctions in the light of the Fowler–Nordheim representation and the Simmons model for electron tunneling. We demonstrate light emission from the feedgap upon electron injection and show examples of how this nanoscale light source can be coupled to waveguiding structures. Conclusion: Electromigrated in-plane tunneling optical antennas feature interesting properties with their unique functionality enabling interfacing electrons and photons at the atomic scale and with the same device. This technology may open new routes for device-to-device communication and for interconnecting an electronic control layer to a photonic architecture.
international conference on transparent optical networks | 2017
Manon Lamy; Kamal Hammani; Juan Arocas; Julien Fatome; Jean-Claude Weeber; Christophe Finot
We demonstrate error free transmissions of 10 Gbps signals in titanium dioxide waveguides at wavelengths of 1.55 or 2 µm. An efficient coupling of light is achieved thanks to metal grating couplers and we have checked that the component could be used with standard CWDM SFP+ devices.
european quantum electronics conference | 2017
Manon Lamy; Christophe Finot; Julien Fatome; Juan Arocas; Jean-Claude Weeber; Kamal Hammani
Exploring new spectral bands for optical transmission is one of the solutions to support the increasingly demand of data traffic. The recent development of dedicated hollow-core photonic bandgap fibers [1], associated to the emergence of thulium doped fiber amplifiers [2] has recently focused the attention further in the infrared, and more specifically around 2 μm. Regarding integrated photonics, it becomes therefore interesting to find a suitable platform to operate at 2 μm as well as in the other more conventional spectral bands (going from 800 nm to 1550 nm). Here, we propose titanium dioxide (TiO2) as a good candidate for integrated waveguide photonics and demonstrate, for the first time, high bit rate transmissions at 1550 nm and 1980 nm.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2013
Mingxia Song; Arnaud Stolz; D. Zhang; Juan Arocas; Laurent Markey; Gérard Colas des Francs; Erik Dujardin; Alexandre Bouhelier
Plasmonics is an emerging technology capable of simultaneously transporting a plasmonic signal and an electronic signal on the same information support. In this context, metal nanowires are especially desirable for realizing dense routing networks. A prerequisite to operate such shared nanowire-based platform relies on our ability to electrically contact individual metal nanowires and efficiently excite surface plasmon polaritons in this information support. In this article, we describe a protocol to bring electrical terminals to chemically-synthesized silver nanowires randomly distributed on a glass substrate. The positions of the nanowire ends with respect to predefined landmarks are precisely located using standard optical transmission microscopy before encapsulation in an electron-sensitive resist. Trenches representing the electrode layout are subsequently designed by electron-beam lithography. Metal electrodes are then fabricated by thermally evaporating a Cr/Au layer followed by a chemical lift-off. The contacted silver nanowires are finally transferred to a leakage radiation microscope for surface plasmon excitation and characterization. Surface plasmons are launched in the nanowires by focusing a near infrared laser beam on a diffraction-limited spot overlapping one nanowire extremity. For sufficiently large nanowires, the surface plasmon mode leaks into the glass substrate. This leakage radiation is readily detected, imaged, and analyzed in the different conjugate planes in leakage radiation microscopy. The electrical terminals do not affect the plasmon propagation. However, a current-induced morphological deterioration of the nanowire drastically degrades the flow of surface plasmons. The combination of surface plasmon leakage radiation microscopy with a simultaneous analysis of the nanowire electrical transport characteristics reveals the intrinsic limitations of such plasmonic circuitry.
ACS Photonics | 2016
Jean-Claude Weeber; Kamal Hammani; Gérard Colas-des-Francs; Alexandre Bouhelier; Juan Arocas; Arunandan Kumar; Fabien Eloi; Stéphanie Buil; Xavier Quélin; Jean-Pierre Hermier; Michel Nasilowski; Benoit Dubertret
Optics Letters | 2017
Manon Lamy; Kamal Hammani; Juan Arocas; Christophe Finot; Jean-Claude Weeber
Applied Sciences | 2017
Manon Lamy; Christophe Finot; Julien Fatome; Juan Arocas; Jean Claude Weeber; Kamal Hammani
Applied Sciences | 2018
Kamal Hammani; Laurent Markey; Manon Lamy; Bertrand Kibler; Juan Arocas; Julien Fatome; Alain Dereux; Jean-Claude Weeber; Christophe Finot