Nano Lett. 18, 6750–6755 (2018)

The phase control and shaping of the second-harmonic radiation generated from an AlGaAs nanodisk antenna has now been accomplished by a team of researchers from Italy, France and Australia. Lavinia Ghirardini and co-workers used electron-beam lithography to fabricate a pair of gratings located either side of a nonlinear nanoantenna. Phase engineering then made it possible to redirect and control the emission angle of second-harmonic light generated from the optically pumped structure. The precise angle of emission can be engineered by employing gratings with different symmetry, or by varying the polarization of the optical pump beam. The control of the emission direction is important because it means that two orders of magnitude more power can be collected out of the antenna plane and arbitrary emission angles could be useful for certain applications. Another key point is that the AlGaAs structures can exhibit lower losses than metallic nanoantennas, which aid efficiency. Such efficient shaping of the nonlinear beams may have applications to, for example, single-photon sources and nonlinear imaging.

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American Chemical Society