Total absorption of visible light in ultrathin weakly absorbing semiconductor gratings
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Authors
Sturmberg, Björn C. P.
Chong, Teck K.
White, Thomas
Botten, Lindsay C.
Dossou, Kokou B.
Poulton, Christopher G.
Catchpole, Kylie
McPhedran, Ross C.
Martijn de Sterke, C.
Choi, Duk-Yong
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Optical Society of America
Abstract
The perfect absorption of light in subwavelength thickness layers generally relies on exotic materials, metamaterials, or
thick metallic gratings. Here we demonstrate that total light absorption can be achieved in ultrathin gratings composed
of conventional materials, including relatively weakly absorbing semiconductors, which are compatible with optoelectronic
applications such as photodetectors and optical modulators. We fabricate a 41 nm thick antimony sulphide
grating structure that has a measured absorptance of A 99.3% at a visible wavelength of 591 nm, in excellent agreement
with theory. We infer that the absorption within the grating is A 98.7%, with only A 0.6% within the silver
mirror. A planar reference sample absorbs A 7.7% at this wavelength.
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Source
Optica
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Open Access via publisher website