Traditional semiconductor photodetectors power digital cameras by generating electrical current directly when visible light strikes a semiconductor material, but they only capture a narrow band of wavelengths similar to the range visible to the human eye. To detect more exotic or longer wavelengths, researchers often turn to pyroelectric detectors that convert heat from absorbed light into electrical signals. These thermal devices, however, have historically been slow and bulky because they rely on thick absorber layers and large temperature changes to produce usable signals.
Maiken Mikkelsen and her colleagues overcame these limitations by engineering a metasurface that traps light with extreme efficiency right at the detector interface. The architecture uses carefully designed silver nanocubes sitting on a transparent spacer only about 10 nanometers thick above a thin gold film. When incoming light hits the nanocubes, it excites collective electron oscillations in the silver, a plasmonic effect that confines and concentrates the electromagnetic energy at specific frequencies set by the nanocubes' dimensions and spacing.
Because the metasurface absorbs light so efficiently, it only needs an extremely thin layer of pyroelectric material beneath it to generate a signal. This combination of near-perfect absorption and minimal thermal mass allows the detector to heat and cool on very fast time scales, dramatically boosting speed. Mikkelsen's group first showed in 2019 that this approach could produce ultrafast thermal imaging, but their earlier setup could not precisely quantify the detector's response time.
In their latest work, led by PhD student Eunso Shin, the team redesigned the device and measurement system to capture its full performance. They reshaped the metasurface into a circular region to maximize light collection while shortening the path the electrical signal must travel, which helps preserve the ultrafast response. The researchers also incorporated even thinner pyroelectric films supplied by collaborators and upgraded the readout circuitry to efficiently extract the tiny, rapid voltage changes.
To measure the detector's speed without relying on prohibitively expensive test equipment, Shin used an optical approach based on two distributed feedback lasers. By tuning the lasers so that their frequency difference matched the detector's operating bandwidth, the team could infer how quickly the device generated electrical signals from the incoming light. This optical-beat technique revealed that the metasurface-enhanced thermal photodetector operates at frequencies up to 2.8 gigahertz, corresponding to an effective response time of about 125 picoseconds.
Pyroelectric photodetectors typically function in the nanosecond-to-microsecond regime, so achieving picosecond response marks a major leap for thermal imaging technology. The results show that thermal detectors based on thin pyroelectrics and engineered metasurfaces can rival or even approach the switching speeds usually associated with semiconductor photodiodes. The group now aims to push the performance further by positioning the pyroelectric material and the electrical contacts directly in the nanoscale gap between the silver nanocubes and the gold film to shorten transport distances and enhance coupling.
Beyond raw speed, the platform offers a route to compact cameras that simultaneously capture multiple wavelengths and polarizations. By patterning arrays of metasurfaces tuned to different frequencies, a single chip could decode rich spectral signatures from scenes in real time. Such multispectral imaging could help clinicians spot skin cancers earlier, enable rapid inspection of food quality, and give farmers detailed maps of crop health to optimize irrigation and fertilization.
Because the detectors operate at room temperature and do not require external power sources, they are also attractive for lightweight, power-constrained platforms. Drones, satellites and spacecraft could carry these cameras to monitor environmental conditions, track vegetation stress over large areas or conduct remote sensing tasks with improved spectral resolution. The combination of ultrafast response, broadband sensitivity and low power consumption makes the technology well suited to distributed sensing networks and mobile systems.
The Duke team emphasizes that there is still room to refine fabrication techniques and improve uniformity across larger arrays, which will be important for scaling the technology into commercial devices. They are exploring methods to integrate different pyroelectric materials, optimize nanocube geometries and engineer robust on-chip readout electronics that can handle multi-gigahertz signals. As these engineering challenges are addressed, the metasurface approach could evolve into a flexible platform for next-generation thermal imagers.
Looking ahead, Mikkelsen and her collaborators see opportunities to pair the detectors with advanced data processing and machine learning algorithms tailored to multispectral data. That combination could accelerate applications in cancer diagnostics, food safety monitoring and security screening, where subtle spectral differences carry important information. While these uses remain under development, the present work establishes a new speed benchmark for pyroelectric photodetectors and demonstrates how nanoscale metasurfaces can fundamentally change the performance limits of thermal imaging sensors.
Research Report:Metasurface-Enhanced Thermal Photodetector Operating at Gigahertz Frequencies.
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