Nathaniel Kinsey
Virginia Commonwealth University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Nathaniel Kinsey.
Advanced Materials | 2014
Wei Li; Urcan Guler; Nathaniel Kinsey; Gururaj V. Naik; Alexandra Boltasseva; Jianguo Guan; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Alexander V. Kildishev
A high-temperature stable broadband plasmonic absorber is designed, fabricated, and optically characterized. A broadband absorber with an average high absorption of 95% and a total thickness of 240 nm is fabricated, using a refractory plasmonic material, titanium nitride. This absorber integrates both the plasmonic resonances and the dielectric-like loss. It opens a path for the interesting applications such as solar thermophotovoltaics and optical circuits.
Optics Express | 2013
Viktoriia E. Babicheva; Nathaniel Kinsey; Gururaj V. Naik; Marcello Ferrera; Andrei V. Lavrinenko; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Alexandra Boltasseva
We propose several planar layouts of ultra-compact plasmonic modulators that utilize alternative plasmonic materials such as transparent conducting oxides and titanium nitride. The modulation is achieved by tuning the carrier concentration in a transparent conducting oxide layer into and out of the plasmon resonance with an applied electric field. The resonance significantly increases the absorption coefficient of the modulator, which enables larger modulation depth. We show that an extinction ratio of 46 dB/µm can be achieved, allowing for a 3-dB modulation depth in much less than one micron at the telecommunication wavelength. Our multilayer structures can be integrated with existing plasmonic and photonic waveguides as well as novel semiconductor-based hybrid photonic/electronic circuits.We propose several planar layouts of ultra-compact plasmonic waveguide modulators that utilize alternative CMOS-compatible materials. The modulation is efficiently achieved by tuning the carrier concentration in a transparent conducting oxide layer, thereby tuning the waveguide either in plasmonic resonance or off-resonance. Resonance significantly increases the absorption coefficient of the plasmonic waveguide, which enables larger modulation depth. We show that an extinction ratio of 86 dB/um can be achieved, allowing for a 3-dB modulation depth in less than one micron at the telecommunication wavelength. Our multilayer structures can potentially be integrated with existing plasmonic and photonic waveguides as well as novel semiconductor-based hybrid photonic/electronic circuits.
Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2015
Nathaniel Kinsey; Marcello Ferrera; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Alexandra Boltasseva
The scaling that has governed the continual increase in density, performance, and efficiency of electronic devices is rapidly reaching its inevitable limitations. In order to sustain the trend of ever-increasing bandwidth and performance, new technologies are being considered. Among the many competitors, nanophotonic technologies are especially poised to have an impact on the field of integrated devices. Here, we examine the available technologies, both traditional photonics and plasmonics, with emphasis on the latter. A summary of the previous advances in the field of nanophotonics (interconnects and modulators), along with more recent works investigating novel and CMOS-compatible materials, are presented with a graphical comparison of their performance. We suggest that nanophotonic technologies offer key advantages for future hybrid electrophotonic devices, where the movement toward new material platforms is a precursor to high-performance, industry-ready devices.
Optics Express | 2014
Nathaniel Kinsey; Marcello Ferrera; Gururaj V. Naik; Viktoriia E. Babicheva; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Alexandra Boltasseva
An insulator-metal-insulator plasmonic interconnect using TiN, a CMOS-compatible material, is proposed and investigated experimentally at the telecommunication wavelength of 1.55 µm. The TiN waveguide was shown to obtain propagation losses less than 0.8 dB/mm with a mode size of 9.8 µm on sapphire, which agree well with theoretical predictions. A theoretical analysis of a solid-state structure using Si(3)N(4) superstrates and ultra-thin metal strips shows that propagation losses less than 0.3 dB/mm with a mode size of 9 µm are attainable. This work illustrates the potential of TiN as a realistic plasmonic material for practical solid-state, integrated nano-optic and hybrid photonic devices.
Journal of Optics | 2016
Augustine Urbas; Zubin Jacob; Luca Dal Negro; Nader Engheta; Allan D. Boardman; P. Egan; Alexander B. Khanikaev; Vinod M. Menon; Marcello Ferrera; Nathaniel Kinsey; Clayton DeVault; Jongbum Kim; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Alexandra Boltasseva; Jason Valentine; Carl Pfeiffer; Anthony Grbic; Evgenii E. Narimanov; Linxiao Zhu; Shanhui Fan; Andrea Alù; Ekaterina Poutrina; Natalia M. Litchinitser; M. A. Noginov; Kevin F. MacDonald; Eric Plum; Xiaoying Liu; Paul F. Nealey; Cherie R. Kagan; Christopher B. Murray
Optical metamaterials have redefined how we understand light in notable ways: from strong response to optical magnetic fields, negative refraction, fast and slow light propagation in zero index and trapping structures, to flat, thin and perfect lenses. Many rules of thumb regarding optics, such as mu = 1, now have an exception, and basic formulas, such as the Fresnel equations, have been expanded. The field of metamaterials has developed strongly over the past two decades. Leveraging structured materials systems to generate tailored response to a stimulus, it has grown to encompass research in optics, electromagnetics, acoustics and, increasingly, novel hybrid materials responses. This roadmap is an effort to present emerging fronts in areas of optical metamaterials that could contribute and apply to other research communities. By anchoring each contribution in current work and prospectively discussing future potential and directions, the authors are translating the work of the field in selected areas to a wider community and offering an incentive for outside researchers to engage our community where solid links do not already exist.
Optical Materials Express | 2015
Nathaniel Kinsey; Akbar Ali Syed; Devon Courtwright; Clayton DeVault; Carl E. Bonner; Vladimir I. Gavrilenko; Vladimir M. Shalaev; David J. Hagan; Eric W. Van Stryland; Alexandra Boltasseva
Nanophotonic devices offer an unprecedented ability to concentrate light into small volumes which can greatly increase nonlinear effects. However, traditional plasmonic materials suffer from low damage thresholds and are not compatible with standard semiconductor technology. Here we study the nonlinear optical properties in the novel refractory plasmonic material titanium nitride using the Z scan method at 1550 nm and 780 nm. We compare the extracted nonlinear parameters for TiN with previous works on noble metals and note a similarly large nonlinear optical response. However, TiN films have been shown to exhibit a damage threshold up to an order of magnitude higher than gold films of a similar thickness, while also being robust, cost-efficient, bio- and CMOS compatible. Together, these properties make TiN a promising material for metal-based nonlinear optics.
Nature Communications | 2017
Matteo Clerici; Nathaniel Kinsey; Clayton DeVault; Jongbum Kim; Enrico Giuseppe Carnemolla; Lucia Caspani; Amr Shaltout; Daniele Faccio; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Alexandra Boltasseva; Marcello Ferrera
Nanophotonics and metamaterials have revolutionized the way we think about optical space (ε,μ), enabling us to engineer the refractive index almost at will, to confine light to the smallest of the volumes, and to manipulate optical signals with extremely small footprints and energy requirements. Significant efforts are now devoted to finding suitable materials and strategies for the dynamic control of the optical properties. Transparent conductive oxides exhibit large ultrafast nonlinearities under both interband and intraband excitations. Here we show that combining these two effects in aluminium-doped zinc oxide via a two-colour laser field discloses new material functionalities. Owing to the independence of the two nonlinearities, the ultrafast temporal dynamics of the material permittivity can be designed by acting on the amplitude and delay of the two fields. We demonstrate the potential applications of this novel degree of freedom by dynamically addressing the modulation bandwidth and optical spectral tuning of a probe optical pulse.
Nano Letters | 2015
Paul R. West; Nathaniel Kinsey; Marcello Ferrera; Alexander V. Kildishev; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Alexandra Boltasseva
Hyperbolic metamaterials (HMMs) have shown great promise in the optical and quantum communities due to their extremely large, broadband photonic density of states. This feature is a direct consequence of supporting photonic modes with unbounded k-vectors. While these materials support such high-k waves, they are intrinsically confined inside the HMM and cannot propagate into the far-field, rendering them impractical for many applications. Here, we demonstrate how the magnitude of k-vectors can be engineered as the propagating radiation passes through media of differing dispersion relations (including type II HMMs and dielectrics) in the in-plane direction. The total outcoupling efficiency of waves in the in-plane direction is shown to be on average 2 orders of magnitude better than standard out-of-plane outcoupling methods. In addition, the outcoupling can be further enhanced using a proposed tapered HMM waveguide that is fabricated using a shadowed glancing angle deposition technique; thereby proving the feasibility of the proposed device. Applications for this technique include converting high-k waves to low-k waves that can be out-coupled into free-space and creating extremely high-k waves that are quickly quenched. Most importantly, this method of in-plane outcoupling acts as a bridge through which waves can cross between the regimes of low-k waves in classical dielectric materials and the high-k waves in HMMs with strongly reduced reflective losses.
Advanced Materials | 2017
Cheng Zhang; Nathaniel Kinsey; Long Chen; Chengang Ji; Mingjie Xu; Marcello Ferrera; Xiaoqing Pan; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Alexandra Boltasseva; L. Jay Guo
The field of nanophotonics has ushered in a new paradigm of light manipulation by enabling deep subdiffraction confinement assisted by metallic nanostructures. However, a key limitation which has stunted a full development of high-performance nanophotonic devices is the typical large losses associated with the constituent metals. Although silver has long been known as the highest quality plasmonic material for visible and near infrared applications, its usage has been limited due to practical issues of continuous thin film formation, stability, adhesion, and surface roughness. Recently, a solution is proposed to the above issues by doping a proper amount of aluminum during silver deposition. In this work, the potential of doped silver for nanophotonic applications is presented by demonstrating several high-performance key nanophotonic devices. First, long-range surface plasmon polariton waveguides show propagation distances of a few centimeters. Second, hyperbolic metamaterials consisting of ultrathin Al-doped Ag films are attained having a homogeneous and low-loss response, and supporting a broad range of high-k modes. Finally, transparent conductors based on Al-doped Ag possess both a high and flat transmittance over the visible and near-IR range.
Optical Materials Express | 2015
S. Prayakarao; Spencer W. Robbins; Nathaniel Kinsey; Alexandra Boltasseva; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Ulrich Wiesner; Carl E. Bonner; R. Hussain; N. Noginova; M. A. Noginov
We have synthesized gyroidal TiN metamaterials, studied their optical properties, and compared them with the optical properties of the TiN thin films fabricated using reactive magnetron sputtering. The plasma frequency, ωp, and the corresponding free carrier concentration, N, in the gyroid samples were found to be much lower than those in thin films. Furthermore, the plasma frequency in TiN gyroids was comparable to or smaller than the damping rate, γD. This makes the studied TiN gyroid a poor plasmonic material. At the same time, TiN gyroidal samples have demonstrated bright rainbow pattern in the optical microscopy reflectance study. This phenomenon is tentatively explained by different orientations of the gyroid domains.