Defect-induced ultimately fast volume phonon-polaritons in the wurtzite Zn0.74Mg0.26Se mixed crystal
Résumé
Volume-phonon-polaritons (VPP’s) propagating at a light-in-vacuum-like speed are identified in the wurtzite-type Zn0.74Mg0.26Se mixed crystal by near-forward Raman scattering. Their detection is selective to both the laser energy and the laser polarization, depending on whether the ordinary (n0) or extraordinary (ne) refractive index is addressed. Yet, no significant linear birefringence (n0 ≃ ne) is observed by ellipsometry. The current access to ultrafast VPP’s is attributed to the quasi-resonant Raman probing of an anomalous dispersion of n0 due to impurity levels created deep in the optical band gap by oriented structural defects. The resonance conditions are evidenced by a dramatic enhancement of the Raman signals due to the polar modes. Hence, this work reveals a capacity for the lattice defects’ engineering to “accelerate” the VPP’s of a mixed crystal up to light-in-vacuum-like speeds. This is attractive for ultrafast signal processing in the terahertz range. On the fundamental side we provide an insight into the VPP’s created by alloying ultimately close to the center of the Brillouin zone.
Origine | Publication financée par une institution |
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