Abstract
During the past few years, the optics and photonics communities have
renewed their attention toward transparent conducting oxides (TCOs),
which for over two decades have been broadly employed for the
fabrication of transparent electrodes in photovoltaic and
communication technologies. This reinvigorated research curiosity is
twofold: on the one hand, TCOs, with their metal-like properties, low
optical absorption, and fabrication flexibility, represent an
appealing alternative to noble metals for designing ultra-compact
plasmonic devices. On the other hand, this class of hybrid compounds
has been proved to possess exceptionally high optical nonlinearities
when operating on a frequency window centered around their crossover
point, the wavelength point at which the real part of the dielectric
permittivity switches sign. Because TCOs are wide-bandgap materials
with the Fermi level located in the conduction band, they are hybrid
in nature, thus presenting both interband and intraband
nonlinearities. This is the cause of a very rich nonlinear physics
that is yet to be fully understood and explored. In addition to this,
TCOs are epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) materials within a broad
near-infrared spectral range, including the entire telecom bandwidth.
In this operational window a myriad of novel electromagnetic phenomena
have been demonstrated experimentally such as supercoupling, wavefront
freezing, and photon doping. Furthermore, TCOs stand out among all
other ENZ systems due to one fundamental characteristic, which is
hardly attainable even by using structured materials. In fact, around
their ENZ wavelength and for a quite generous operational range, these
materials can be engineered to have an extremely small real index.
This peculiarity leads to a slow-light effect that is ultimately
responsible for a significant enhancement of the material nonlinear
properties and is the cornerstone of the emerging field of
near-zero-index photonics. In this regard, the recent history of
nonlinear optics in conductive oxides is growing extremely fast due to
a great number of experiments reporting unprecedentedly remarkable
effects, including unitary index change, bandwidth-large frequency
shift, efficient ultra-low-power frequency conversion, and many
others. This review is meant to guide the reader through the exciting
journey of TCOs, starting as an industrial material for transparent
electrodes, then becoming a new alternative for low-loss plasmonics,
and recently opening up new frontiers in integrated nonlinear optics.
The present review is mainly focused on experimental observations.
Funder
Office of Naval Research
U.S. Department of Energy
Engineering and Physical Sciences
Research Council
Carnegie Trust for the Universities of
Scotland
Royal Society of Edinburgh
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Cited by
50 articles.
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