Photocurrent at oblique illumination and reconstruction of wavefront direction with 2d photodetectors
Kirill Kapralov, Vladislav Atlasov, Alina Khisameeva, Viacheslav Muravev, Weiwei Cai + 1 more
TLDR
This paper introduces 2D photodetectors that can determine light incidence direction and angle using zero-bias photocurrent and plasmon resonance.
Key contributions
- Developed 2D photodetectors that generate zero-bias photocurrent from obliquely incident light.
- Reconstructs light incidence direction (quadrant) based on photocurrent measurements.
- Achieves quantitative incidence angle determination using 2D plasmon resonance at variable carrier density.
Why it matters
This research addresses a gap in photodetector capabilities by enabling the determination of light incidence direction and angle. It opens new avenues for advanced optical sensing and imaging technologies. This could enhance applications requiring precise spatial light information.
Original Abstract
Many contemporary photodetectors operate beyond the readout of light intensity and enable the reconstruction of spectrum and polarization at the single-pixel level. However, the determination of light incidence direction with reconstructive detectors has not been realized so far. We show that photodetectors based on symmetric junctions of metals and 2d electron systems (2DES) enable (1) zero-bias photocurrent at oblique light incidence (2) reconstruction of incidence direction based on photocurrent measurements at variable carrier density. The former effect is based on peculiar electrodynamics of metal-contacted 2DES, where spatial variations of incident field phase translate into strong variations of local field amplitude. The local absorbances at two opposite metal-2DES junctions at oblique incidence are dissimilar, which results in finite photocurrent independent of microscopic rectification mechanism at these junctions. The direction of photocurrent uniquely determines the quadrant of light incidence. Quantitative determination of incidence angle becomes possible under conditions of 2d plasmon resonance at variable carrier density. In such a case, obliquely incident radiation excites the asymmetric plasmon modes, which amplitude carries unique information about angle of incidence.
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