According to the researchers, this type of configuration could open the door to the development of new miniature nanobiosensors and to the design of future systems and networks based on quantum optics.
The research, conducted by the NTC-UPV team, has been able for the first time to combine the benefits of dielectric wireless applications (for the design of reconfigurable networks, creating beams or biosensors) with the benefits of plasmonics (based on the use of metallic devices and interconnections for the ultra-fast conversion of data or light engineering at nanometric levels) and opens the path to a new generation of ultra-integrated hybrid networks, which is the main contribution of the research.
“We experimentally proved the first wireless dielectric-plasmonic connection thanks to a new type of dielectric nanoantenna that overcomes the limitations that plasmonics had until now, opening the door to new hybrid configurations. The results we have obtained have a direct implication in the design of reconfigurable communication networks inside the chip, in the development of ultra-fast optic devices, and in the practical implementation of ultra-compact biosensors. Thanks to plasmonic structures, this also opens the door to the creation of interfaces with future quantum systems,” explained Javier Martí, head of the Nanophotonic Technology Centre of the UPV.
As Sergio Lechago, researcher at the NTC, explained, plasmonic devices have enabled the development of important applications in fields such as spectroscopy, near-field and sensing optic microscopy thanks to their unique capability of manipulating light on a nano level.
Within the communications integrated in the chip, plasmonics enable the development of ultra-compact and affordable devices (modulators, detectors or sources) that can function at very high operation speeds with low energy consumption.
“The natural way of interconnecting these devices in the optic chip is by using metallic nanoguides. However, guiding light through these devices leads to very high propagation losses and entails certain restrictions regarding reconfigurability,” explained Carlos García Meca, from the NTC.
“The use of plasmonic nanoantennas has been proposed to replace and improve the performance of guided metallic interconnections, but these antennas have low directivity and high losses which hinder their use in many practical applications. In this work, we overcame all these limitations by introducing a new dielectric nanoantenna design that acts as an efficient interface for plasmonic systems. This makes it possible to combine the benefits of plasmonics with those of silicon photonics, which can lead to more efficient, fast and reconfigurable chips,” added Meca.