Abstract
A broadband absorber in the infrared wavelength range from 1 μm up to 5 μm is designed and demonstrated with stacked double chromium ring resonators on a reflective chromium mirror. The near-perfect broadband absorption is realized by combining the multilayer impedance match in the short wavelength range and the double plasmonic resonances in the long wavelength range, which is illustrated with an equivalent circuit model for the impedance analysis. The broadband absorber is proved to be angle-insensitive and polarization-independent due to the geometrical symmetry. The thermal analysis for heat generation and temperature distributions inside the absorber structure is also investigated.
© 2017 Optical Society of America
1. Introduction
Broadband infrared absorbers have been widely studied recently [1,2] due to their crucial roles in various applications such as solar energy harvesting [3,4], thermophotovoltaic energy conversion [5–7], thermal emission [8,9], thermal imaging [10], and stealth devices [11]. Diverse methods have been considered to obtain broadband absorption based on different mechanisms including the combination of multiple resonances in metasurfaces [4,8,12], exciting interferences in metal-dielectric stacks [3,13–15], achieving impedance match in multilayers with free space [16,17], and the generation of slow light in tapered multilayer waveguides [18–21].
In this paper, a broadband infrared absorber made of stacked double chromium (Cr) ring resonators on a chromium mirror is designed based on the combination of multilayer impedance match in the short wavelength range and the double plasmonic resonances in the long wavelength range. The absorber structure is milled from two pairs of Cr-SiO2 layers with overall thickness of 360 nm on a reflective substrate. Different from combining multiple resonators in the same horizontal plane, the proposed absorber has double Cr ring resonators stacked in the vertical direction. At the same time, the stacked double ring structure can be effectively regarded as one-dimensional metal-dielectric multilayer lattice for satisfying impedance match conditions in the short wavelength range. An equivalent circuit (EC) model is developed to analyze and optimize the broadband absorber according to the transmission line theory for the multilayer impedance in the short wavelength range and the coupled lumped-element LC resonators [22–25] for the resonance impedance in the long wavelength range. The absorption spectra predicted by the EC model agree with both the simulated and measured absorption spectra and can explain the two absorption mechanisms thoroughly. Further investigations on the oblique incidence under different polarizations, resonant mode fields, heat generation and temperature increase are also performed.
2. Absorber design and equivalent circuit model
The designed infrared absorber is based on a multilayer stack consisting of two pairs of Cr-SiO2 layers with 30 nm thick Cr and 150 nm thick SiO2 in each pair deposited on top of a 200 nm thick Cr mirror coated on a silicon wafer. There is an additional 30 nm thick SiO2 protecting layer deposited on top of the multilayer stack to prevent the top Cr layer from oxidation. The multilayer stack is grown by RF sputtering. The Cr is grown in an Ar atmosphere at 5 mTorr pressure at a deposition rate of and the SiO2 is grown in a 12:1 mixture of Ar:O2 at a rate of . Figure 1(a) shows a scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of the deposited Cr-SiO2 multilayer before milling where each layer can be clearly seen. The thick Cr mirror will block any transmission through the sample. At first, the absorption spectrum of the multilayer film is measured using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). As shown in Fig. 1(b), the experimental absorption is below 50% in the range of , which can be matched well with simulation (COMSOL Multiphysics software), by using the Cr permittivity of shown in Fig. 1(c) calculated according to the Brendel-Bormann model [26–28]. The SiO2 permittivity is equal to a constant .
The schematic of the designed absorber with stacked double ring resonators is illustrated in Fig. 2(a). The absorber structure is fabricated using Focused Ion Beam (FIB) milling in two steps. First, the top pair of Cr-SiO2 layer is milled to form the top ring resonator; and then the bottom pair of Cr-SiO2 layer is milled to form the bottom ring resonator. During the FIB milling, a SiO2 layer with very thin thickness is remained on top of the second Cr layer to avoid oxidation. Due to the zero transmission from the absorber, the absorption is merely determined by the reflection and is equal to . The Cr layers have the thickness of and the two SiO2 layers have the thickness of . In one unit cell, the period in and directions are both equal to . For one design, when the period is , the top ring width is and the bottom ring width is . The inner hole size of the two rings is the same with .
An equivalent circuit (EC) model is developed to evaluate the broadband absorption mechanism of the designed double-ring absorber by considering the combination of the multilayer impedance match in the short wavelength range and the double plasmonic resonances in the long wavelength range. The multilayer impedance can be regarded as a high-pass filter with no reflection at high frequencies and the resonance impedance can be treated as a low-pass filter with no reflection at low frequencies. As shown in Fig. 2(b), the EC model is then built up by adding the two impedances together in series to estimate the total impedance of the absorber, . And the absorption can be calculated as , where is the impedance of free space.
can be evaluated according to the transmission line theory by regarding the double-ring resonators as effective one-dimensional metal-dielectric multilayer lattice in the vertical direction [17,29,30],
where Z(1) represents the wave impedance of the whole multilayer structure seen from the top and can be calculated layer by layer starting from the bottom Cr mirror with the wave impedance of Z(6) up to the top SiO2 protecting layer with the wave impedance of, by considering the phase shift and the characteristic impedance for each layer j of the multilayer lattice. in which is the wave vector of incident wave, is the complex refractive index and is the layer thickness. Particularly, is modified by a factor to represent the effective layer thickness due to the material milling.is estimated based on the coupled lumped-element LC resonators. As shown in Fig. 2(c), when the incident light has the field components of and , each ring resonator can be divided into two symmetric half-ring parts [31–33] of width and length by the central line and transformed into two cut-wires of effective width and effective length . Each cut-wire is a LC resonator consisting of three components: inductor , resistor and capacitor . The capacitor due to the electric resonance between two neighboring rings is ignored to simplify the circuit since the magnetic resonance is dominant in this structure [34]. Here, can be expressed as the capacitance between two parallel plates separated by a distance [35], , where is the permeability of vacuum and is a numerical factor considering the effective length of the cut-wire. , where is a numerical factor, and is defined as the combination of intrinsic resistivity and inductivity [23] of the metal (with relative permittivity of ) since the contribution of the drifting electrons cannot be neglected at infrared frequencies [22,24,33]. is formed between the half-ring and the Cr mirror due to the magnetic resonance and evaluated by the capacitance between two parallel plates separated by the dielectric spacer [32,35], , where is the permittivity of vacuum, is the relative permittivity of the dielectric spacer, and is a numerical factor representing the effective capacitance area.
The equivalent circuit for is shown in Fig. 2(d) consisting of two LC resonators. The first LC resonator includes and representing the top ring and between the top-ring layer and the Cr mirror. The second LC resonator is similar to the first one but it is formed by the middle ring and the Cr mirror including circuit components of , and . Meanwhile, when two ring resonators are placed closely, they are coupled through the capacitor between the two rings separated by the dielectric spacer [36,37]. Eventually, the calculated can be expressed as:
3. Demonstration of broadband infrared absorber
The broadband absorption response of the double-ring absorber can be evaluated by combing the two impedances of and together. As an example, for the absorber with period of , Fig. 3(a) shows the absorption spectra calculated by the EC model and the simulation result (COMSOL Multiphysics software). In order to fit the simulated resonance peaks of two ring resonators and absorption amplitude, the coefficients used in the EC model for the double-ring absorber with are set as the following: for each effective layer of respectively; , , for the top ring resonator, , , for the bottom ring resonator, and for the coupling of two ring resonators. In the long wavelength range (), the absorption is majorly due to the double ring resonances, and in the short wavelength range (), the absorption is mainly due to the multilayer impedance match condition. To explain the combination of these two absorption mechanisms, , and calculated by the EC model are plotted in Fig. 3(b). There are two peaks in the real part of located at about and representing the two Cr ring resonances in the long wavelength range. Correspondingly, two absorption peaks in the range of can be observed in the EC model curve in Fig. 3(a). Additionally, the real part of is close to at about indicating that the multilayer impedance match condition can be achieved in the short wavelength range. The absorption peak of the theoretical absorption in the range of is the intersection of and resulting from the real part of close to .
In order to show how the absorption spectrum change with the absorber structure size, three double-ring absorbers with different periods and ring sizes are fabricated. As shown in Figs. 4(a)-4(c), the solid curves are the measured absorption spectra for the double-ring absorbers with periods of (in magenta), (in blue) and (in red), respectively, while the ring dimensions keep the same ratios as , , (the gap between two neighboring bottom rings is always ). The dashed curves are the simulated absorption spectra. The insert in each figure is the SEM image of the fabricated double-ring absorber. The absorption spectrum range is affected by the period P and the ring length . When P = (with ring dimensions of and ), the absorption spectrum range with more than 80% absorption is . As P is increased, the absorption spectrum range gets broader but the absorption becomes lower. For P = (with ring dimensions of and ), the absorption spectrum range can reach for the absorption over 80%. The absorber with (with ring dimensions of and ) is the optimized result by taking account of the trade-off between absorption spectrum range and absorption amount. Its absorption spectrum range can reach with the absorption over 80%.
The double-ring structure will change into double-square structure if the center hole has the zero width, which can make the fabrication process simpler. Similar to the double-ring structure, the double-square structure can also be regarded as two coupled plasmonic resonators. As shown in Fig. 5, the double-square absorbers with the periods of , and can also achieve the broadband absorption spectra with absorption above similar to the double-ring absorbers. The absorption spectrum of double-square absorber is not as flat as that of double-ring absorber, but it has a small absorption peak in the long wavelength range.
Oblique incidence is also considered to show if the designed absorber can work in different incident angles and collect more infrared light. Since the double-ring structure is symmetric, the absorption is the same for TE and TM polarizations (configurations as shown in Figs. 6(a) and 6(b)) under normal incidence. However, under oblique incidence, the absorption spectra varies differently for TE and TM polarizations when considering the incident angle from to , as shown in Figs. 6(c) and 6(d) for the absorber with . It is shown that the absorption for TM polarization can be kept around even at high incident angles, while the absorption for TE polarization is not as high as TM polarization but still remains around at high incident angles. This is because the double ring resonances are magnetic resonances and the multilayer impedance match can be sustained better for TM polarization at oblique incidence. In consequence, the designed broadband infrared absorber is angle-insensitive and polarization-independent and thus it is practical for energy harvesting applications.
To further explore the two plasmonic resonances of the stacked double Cr ring resonators, optical field distributions are analyzed at the resonant wavelengths using COMSOL Multiphysics software. As shown in Fig. 7(a), the two magnetic resonances can be illustrated with the normalized field profiles in plane. At the first magnetic resonance of dominated by the top ring, the magnetic field is mainly located between the two rings. At the second magnetic resonance of dominated by the bottom ring, the magnetic field is mostly confined between the bottom ring layer and the Cr mirror.
Particularly in solar thermophotovoltaics (STPV) applications, the device working temperature is usually required to reach at least [38–40] which approaches or even sometimes surpasses the melting points of bulk gold () and silver () [41]. Chromium with a melting point of [17] utilized in infrared absorbers can stand high operating temperature. In addition, chromium is significantly cheaper than gold or silver, making chromium a reasonable choice for high-volume production of infrared absorbers. In the broadband absorber, incident light will be eventually converted into heat because of the resistive loss () of metal. In this way, the Cr ring resonators act as nanoscale heat sources resulting in the local temperature increase and eventually a thermal equilibrium will be reached since the heat is conducted away by air above the absorber structure and the Cr mirror below. To investigate the temperature distribution in the absorber, the heat transfer equation is solved, where is the thermal conductivity and is the heat power density generated in the Cr layers, . As shown in Fig. 7(b), when the incident single-wavelength plane wave at matching the top ring resonance is used with the incident power of (corresponding to optical power into each unit cell), the maximum heat generation density is about located at the top ring. When the wavelength of incident plane wave is tuned to match the bottom ring resonance at , the maximum heat generation density can reach located at the bottom ring. At thermal equilibrium, the temperature increase distribution is a result of the balance between the heat generation and the boundary conditions where heat is conducted away. In simulation, the top and bottom boundaries are set as the fixed temperature and the side boundaries are insulated since the structure is periodic. The temperature increase distributions are plotted in Fig. 7(c) at the two resonant wavelengths. According to the Fourier’s law where heat transfer rate is proportional to the thermal conductivity of material and the temperature gradient as well, the highest temperature is located in the top-ring for since heat is mostly generated in the top ring. However, for , temperature increase in the top ring is still high (reaching to ) although heat is mainly generated in the bottom ring. This is because the bottom ring is close to the Cr mirror with high thermal conductivity, while dielectric layer and air has a much lower thermal conductivity.
4. Conclusion
A broadband infrared absorber consisting of stacked double Cr ring resonators on a Cr mirror has been designed and demonstrated with an average absorption more than 80% in 1 ~5 μm spectrum range. It is made of the refractory metal Cr based on the combination of two absorption mechanisms: the multilayer impedance match in the short wavelength range and the double plasmonic resonances in the long wavelength range. An equivalent circuit model has been constructed to analyze the impedance of the absorber. The designed absorber is proved to be angle-insensitive and polarization-independent under oblique incidence so that more light can be collected under different situations. The demonstrated Cr based absorber can work in high temperature environments due to the high melting point of Cr. The demonstrated broadband Cr double-ring absorber in infrared wavelength range will advance the relevant applications such as thermophotovoltaics, solar thermophotovoltaics, thermal detection, and thermal imaging.
Funding
National Science Foundation (NSF) (DMR-1552871, ECCS-1653032); Office of Naval Research (ONR) (N00014-16-1-2408); U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357).
Acknowledgment
The authors acknowledge the facility support from the Materials Research Center at Missouri S&T. This work was performed, in part, at the Center for Nanoscale Materials, a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility, and supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357.
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