An in-plane photoelectric effect in two-dimensional electron systems for terahertz detection
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Peer-reviewed
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Many mid and far infrared semiconductor photodetectors rely on a photonic response, when the photon energy is large enough to excite and extract electrons due to optical transitions. Towards the terahertz range with photon energies of a few meV, classical mechanisms are employed instead. This is the case in two-dimensional electron systems, where terahertz detection is dominated by plasmonic mixing and by scattering-based thermal phenomena. Here, we report on the observation of a quantum, collision-free phenomenon which yields a giant photoresponse at terahertz frequencies (1.9 THz), more than ten-fold as large as expected from plasmonic mixing. We artificially create an electrically tunable potential step within a degenerate two-dimensional electron gas. When exposed to terahertz radiation, electrons absorb photons and generate a large photocurrent under zero source-drain bias. The observed phenomenon, which we call the "in-plane photoelectric effect", provides an opportunity for efficient direct detection across the entire terahertz range.
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2375-2548
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European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) (881603)