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Birefringence, dimensionality, and surface influences on organic hybrid electro-optic performance

Authors :
Lewis E. Johnson
Bruce H. Robinson
Stephanie J. Benight
Delwin L. Elder
Scott R. Hammond
Andreas F. Tillack
Wolfgang Heni
Larry R. Dalton
Source :
Physical Chemistry of Semiconductor Materials and Interfaces XX.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SPIE, 2021.

Abstract

Hybrid organic electro-optic (OEO) devices consist of a layer of ordered organic chromophores confined between layers of metals or semiconductors, enabling optical fields to be tightly confined within the OEO material. The combination of tight confinement with the high electro-optic (EO) performance of state-of-the art OEO materials enables exceptional electro-optic switching performance in silicon-organic hybrid (SOH) and plasmonic-organic hybrid (POH) device architectures. Recent records in POH devices include bandwidths < 500 GHz and energy efficiency < 100 aJ/bit. However, optimization of device performance requires both understanding and improving the degree to which chromophores can be acentrically ordered near a metal or semiconductor interface. Applying bulk and/or isotropic models of OEO materials to nanophotonic device architectures often lead to overly optimistic translation of materials performance to device performance. Prior work has identified influences of high centrosymmetric order (birefringence), altered relations between acentric and centrosymmetric order (dimensionality), and surface electrostatics on chromophore ordering. We combine these models into a representation that can be used to understand the influences of these phenomena on device performance, how some prior OEO materials exhibited unusually high performance under confinement, how ordering close to surfaces may be improved, and implications for future electro-optic device design.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Chemistry of Semiconductor Materials and Interfaces XX
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........970e2e2d8b4e1c2ae12e8dee7d1c3136
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2594939