We study plasmonic resonances in electrostatically gated graphene nanoribbons on silicon dioxide substrates. Absorption spectra are measured in the mid-far infrared and reveal multiple peaks, with width-dependent resonant frequencies. We calculate the dielectric function within the random phase approximation and show that the observed spectra can be explained by surface-plasmon-phonon-polariton modes, which arise from coupling of the graphene plasmon to three surface optical phonon modes in the silicon dioxide. a)
In this work we study
metamaterial-enhanced graphene photodetectors
operating in the mid-IR to THz. The detector element consists of a
graphene ribbon embedded within a dual-metal split ring resonator,
which acts like a cavity to enhance the absorption of electromagnetic
radiation by the graphene ribbon, while the asymmetric metal contacts
enable photothermoelectric detection. Detectors designed for the mid-IR
demonstrate peak responsivity (referenced to total power) of ∼120
mV/W at 1500 cm–1 and are employed in the spectroscopic
evaluation of vibrational resonances, thus demonstrating a key step
toward a platform for integrated surface-enhanced sensing.
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