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Dive into the research topics where Yiguo Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Yiguo Chen.


Optics Express | 2013

Hybrid phase-change plasmonic crystals for active tuning of lattice resonances.

Yiguo Chen; T. S. Kao; Binghao Ng; Xiong Li; Xiangang Luo; Boris Luk'yanchuk; Stefan A. Maier; Minghui Hong

Tunable lattice resonances are demonstrated in a hybrid plasmonic crystal incorporating the phase-change material Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST) as a 20-nm-thick layer sandwiched between a gold nanodisk array and a quartz substrate. Non-volatile tuning of lattice resonances over a range Δλ of about 500 nm (1.89 µm to 2.27 µm) is achieved experimentally via intermediate phase states of the GST layer. This work demonstrates the efficacy and ease of resonance tuning via GST in the near infrared, suggesting the possibility to design broadband non-volatile tunable devices for optical modulation, switching, sensing and nonlinear optical devices.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Engineering the Phase Front of Light with Phase-Change Material Based Planar lenses

Yiguo Chen; Xiong Li; Yannick Sonnefraud; Antonio I. Fernández-Domínguez; Xiangang Luo; Minghui Hong; Stefan A. Maier

A novel hybrid planar lens is proposed to engineer the far-field focusing patterns. It consists of an array of slits which are filled with phase-change material Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST). By varying the crystallization level of GST from 0% to 90%, the Fabry-Pérot resonance supported inside each slit can be spectrally shifted across the working wavelength at 1.55 µm, which results in a transmitted electromagnetic phase modulation as large as 0.56π. Based on this geometrically fixed platform, different phase fronts can be constructed spatially on the lens plane by assigning the designed GST crystallization levels to the corresponding slits, achieving various far-field focusing patterns. The present work offers a promising route to realize tunable nanophotonic components, which can be used in optical circuits and imaging applications.


Photonics Research | 2015

Tunable near-infrared plasmonic perfect absorber based on phase-change materials

Yiguo Chen; Xiong Li; Xiangang Luo; Stefan A. Maier; Minghui Hong

A tunable plasmonic perfect absorber with a tuning range of similar to 650 nm is realized by introducing a 20 nm thick phase-change material Ge2Sb2Te5 layer into the metal-dielectric-metal configuration. The absorption at the plasmonic resonance is kept above 0.96 across the whole tuning range. In this work we study this extraordinary optical response numerically and reveal the geometric conditions which support this phenomenon. This work shows a promising route to achieve tunable plasmonic devices for multi-band optical modulation, communication, and thermal imaging


Nano Letters | 2015

Plasmon-Induced Optical Anisotropy in Hybrid Graphene–Metal Nanoparticle Systems

A. M. Gilbertson; Yan Francescato; Tyler Roschuk; Viktoryia Shautsova; Yiguo Chen; Themistoklis P. H. Sidiropoulos; Minghui Hong; Vincenzo Giannini; Stefan A. Maier; L. F. Cohen; Rupert F. Oulton

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.


Nano Letters | 2016

Resonant Enhancement of Second-Harmonic Generation in the Mid-Infrared Using Localized Surface Phonon Polaritons in Subdiffractional Nanostructures

Ilya Razdolski; Yiguo Chen; Alexander J. Giles; Sandy Gewinner; Wieland Schöllkopf; Minghui Hong; Martin Wolf; Vincenzo Giannini; Joshua D. Caldwell; Stefan A. Maier; Alexander Paarmann

We report on the strong enhancement of mid-infrared second-harmonic generation (SHG) from SiC nanopillars due to the resonant excitation of localized surface phonon polaritons within the Reststrahlen band. A strong dependence of the SHG enhancement upon the optical mode distribution was observed. One such mode, the monopole, exhibits an enhancement that is beyond what is anticipated from field localization and dispersion of the linear and nonlinear SiC optical properties. Comparing the results for the identical nanostructures made of 4H and 6H SiC polytypes, we demonstrate the interplay of localized surface phonon polaritons with zone-folded weak phonon modes of the anisotropic crystal. Tuning the monopole mode in and out of the region where the zone-folded phonon is excited in 6H-SiC, we observe a further prominent increase of the already enhanced SHG output when the two modes are coupled. Envisioning this interplay as one of the showcase features of mid-infrared nonlinear nanophononics, we discuss its prospects for the effective engineering of nonlinear-optical materials with desired properties in the infrared spectral range.


Scientific Reports | 2015

A highly efficient CMOS nanoplasmonic crystal enhanced slow-wave thermal emitter improves infrared gas-sensing devices

Andreas Pusch; Andrea De Luca; Sang Soon Oh; Sebastian Wuestner; Tyler Roschuk; Yiguo Chen; S. Boual; Zeeshan Ali; C. C. Phillips; Minghui Hong; Stefan A. Maier; Florin Udrea; Richard Hopper; Ortwin Hess

The application of plasmonics to thermal emitters is generally assisted by absorptive losses in the metal because Kirchhoff’s law prescribes that only good absorbers make good thermal emitters. Based on a designed plasmonic crystal and exploiting a slow-wave lattice resonance and spontaneous thermal plasmon emission, we engineer a tungsten-based thermal emitter, fabricated in an industrial CMOS process, and demonstrate its markedly improved practical use in a prototype non-dispersive infrared (NDIR) gas-sensing device. We show that the emission intensity of the thermal emitter at the CO2 absorption wavelength is enhanced almost 4-fold compared to a standard non-plasmonic emitter, which enables a proportionate increase in the signal-to-noise ratio of the CO2 gas sensor.


Nano Letters | 2018

Nanoscale Mapping and Spectroscopy of Nonradiative Hyperbolic Modes in Hexagonal Boron Nitride Nanostructures

Lisa V. Brown; Marcelo I. Davanco; Zhiyuan Sun; Andrey V. Kretinin; Yiguo Chen; Joseph R. Matson; I. Vurgaftman; Nicholas Sharac; Alexander J. Giles; Michael M. Fogler; Takashi Taniguchi; Kenji Watanabe; K. S. Novoselov; Stefan A. Maier; Andrea Centrone; Joshua D. Caldwell

The inherent crystal anisotropy of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) provides the ability to support hyperbolic phonon polaritons, that is, polaritons that can propagate with very large wave vectors within the material volume, thereby enabling optical confinement to exceedingly small dimensions. Indeed, previous research has shown that nanometer-scale truncated nanocone hBN cavities, with deep subdiffractional dimensions, support three-dimensionally confined optical modes in the mid-infrared. Because of optical selection rules, only a few of the many theoretically predicted modes have been observed experimentally via far-field reflection and scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM). The photothermal induced resonance (PTIR) technique probes optical and vibrational resonances overcoming weak far-field emission by leveraging an atomic force microscope (AFM) probe to transduce local sample expansion caused by light absorption. Here we show that PTIR enables the direct observation of previously unobserved, dark hyperbolic modes of hBN nanostructures. Leveraging these optical modes and their wide range of angular and radial momenta could provide a new degree of control over the electromagnetic near-field concentration, polarization in nanophotonic applications.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Sub-diffractional, volume-confined polaritons in a natural hyperbolic material: hexagonal boron nitride (Presentation Recording)

Joshua D. Caldwell; Andrey V. Kretinin; Yiguo Chen; Vincenzo Giannini; Michael M. Fogler; Yan Francescato; Chase T. Ellis; Joseph G. Tischler; Colin R. Woods; Alexander J. Giles; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Stefan A. Maier; K. S. Novoselov

Strongly anisotropic media where principal components of the dielectric tensor have opposite signs are called hyperbolic. These materials permit highly directional, volume-confined propagation of slow-light modes at deeply sub-diffractional size scales, leading to unique nanophotonic phenomena. The realization of hyperbolic materials within the optical spectral range has been achieved primarily through the use of artificial structures typically composed of plasmonic metals and dielectric constituents. However, while proof-of-principle experiments have been performed, the high plasmonic losses and inhomogeneity of the structures limit most advances to the laboratory. Recently, hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) was identified as a natural hyperbolic material (NHM), offering a low-loss, homogeneous medium that can operate in the mid-infrared. We have exploited the NHM response of hBN within periodic arrays of conical nanoresonators to demonstrate ‘hyperbolic polaritons,’ deeply sub-diffractional guided waves that propagate through the volume rather than on the surface of a hyperbolic material. We have identified that the polaritons are manifested as a four series of resonances in two distinct spectral bands that have mutually exclusive dependencies upon incident light polarization, modal order, and aspect ratio. These observations represent the first foray into creating NHM building blocks for mid-infrared to terahertz nanophotonic and metamaterial devices. This talk will also discuss potential near-term applications stemming from these developments.


Nature Communications | 2014

Sub-diffractional volume-confined polaritons in the natural hyperbolic material hexagonal boron nitride

Joshua D. Caldwell; Andrey V. Kretinin; Yiguo Chen; Giannini; Michael M. Fogler; Y Francescato; Chase T. Ellis; Joseph G. Tischler; Colin R. Woods; Alexander J. Giles; M Hong; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Stefan A. Maier; K. S. Novoselov


ACS Photonics | 2014

Spectral Tuning of Localized Surface Phonon Polariton Resonators for Low-Loss Mid-IR Applications

Yiguo Chen; Yan Francescato; Joshua D. Caldwell; Vincenzo Giannini; Tobias W. W. Maß; Orest J. Glembocki; Francisco J. Bezares; Thomas Taubner; Richard Kasica; Minghui Hong; Stefan A. Maier

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Minghui Hong

National University of Singapore

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Joshua D. Caldwell

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Alexander J. Giles

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Kenji Watanabe

National Institute for Materials Science

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