Surface-near domain engineering in multi-domain x-cut lithium niobate tantalate mixed crystals
Research output: Contribution to journal › Research article › Contributed › peer-review
Contributors
Abstract
Lithium niobate and lithium tantalate are among the most widespread materials for nonlinear, integrated photonics. Mixed crystals with arbitrary Nb–Ta ratios provide an additional degree of freedom to not only tune materials properties, such as the birefringence but also leverage the advantages of the singular compounds, for example, by combining the thermal stability of lithium tantalate with the larger nonlinear or piezoelectric constants of lithium niobate. Periodic poling allows to achieve phase-matching independent of waveguide geometry and is, therefore, one of the commonly used methods in integrated nonlinear optics. For mixed crystals, periodic poling has been challenging so far due to the lack of homogeneous, mono-domain crystals, which severely inhibit domain growth and nucleation. In this work, we investigate surface-near ( lt;1 μm depth) domain inversion on x-cut lithium niobate tantalate mixed crystals via electric field poling and lithographically structured electrodes. We find that naturally occurring head-to-head or tail-to-tail domain walls in the as-grown crystal inhibit domain inversion at a larger scale. However, periodic poling is possible if the gap size between the poling electrodes is of the same order of magnitude or smaller than the average size of naturally occurring domains. This work provides the basis for the nonlinear optical application of lithium niobate tantalate mixed crystals.
Details
Original language | English |
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Article number | 151101 |
Journal | Applied Physics Letters |
Volume | 125 |
Issue number | 15 |
Publication status | Published - 1 Oct 2024 |
Peer-reviewed | Yes |
External IDs
ORCID | /0000-0002-2484-4158/work/169640902 |
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