OUTNANO constitutes a bridge between out-of-equilibrium statistical mechanics and nanophotonics, aiming at the investigation of novel ultrafast effects in silver- and graphene-based plasmonic waveguides (PWs) and epsilon-near-zero metamaterials (ENZ MMs). The ultimate goal is to develop a new generation of low-loss photonic materials with improved efficiencies and enhanced nonlinear functionalities, including frequency conversion and lasing mechanisms, which can open new groundbreaking applications in optoelectronics, spectroscopy,
biology, and medicine. This endeavour is approached by using out-of-equilibrium statistical theories for modelling the dynamics of ultrashort pulses with time duration of few femtoseconds in silver/graphene-based devices. In particular, the project focuses on PWs and ENZ MMs, which offer the best possibilities in terms of nonlinear applications owing to their extraordinary field enhancement.
The main research hypothesis is that optical absorption in silver/graphene can be highly reduced by using ultrashort pulses with time duration smaller than the electron collision time. Indeed, for such short pulse durations, the probability that an electron undergoes a collision is much smaller and the transfer of optical energy to silver/graphene heating is highly reduced. Gaining access to the collisionless regime opens unprecedented possibilities for highly efficient nonlinear applications in silver/graphene-based PWs and ENZ MMs, whose main disadvantage is represented by ohmic loss.
The research objectives (ROs) are:
RO1. Suppression of ohmic loss in silver and graphene with ultrashort pulses in the collisionless regime;
RO2. Exploitation of temporal/spatiotemporal solitons in silver/graphene-based PWs and ENZ MMs for counterbalancing chromatic-dispersion/spatial diffraction through nonlinearity:
- Low-loss temporal solitons in PWs propagating for millimetres,
- Low-loss spatiotemporal solitons in ENZ MMs propagating for millimetres,
RO3. Enhancement of frequency conversion mechanisms in silver/graphene-based PWs and ENZ MMs:
- Enhancement of harmonic generation efficiency,
- Engineering of dispersive waves in the UV with high conversion efficiency,
- Development of SCG at the micrometre-scale through the enhancement of self-phase modulation, self-steepening, and non-local metal nonlinearities.