posted on 2023-11-30, 20:55authored byWladislaw Michailow, Peter Spencer, Nikita W. Almond, Stephen J. Kindness, Robert Wallis, Thomas A. Mitchell, Riccardo Degl'Innocenti, Sergey A. Mikhailov, Harvey E. Beere, David A. Ritchie
The photoelectric effect consists in the photoexcitation of electrons above a potential barrier at a material interface and is exploited for photodetection over a wide frequency range. This three-dimensional process has an inherent inefficiency: photoexcited electrons gain momenta predominantly parallel to the interface, while to leave the material they have to move perpendicular to it. Here, we report on the discovery of an in-plane photoelectric effect occurring within a two-dimensional electron gas. In this purely quantum-mechanical, scattering-free process, photo-electron momenta are perfectly aligned with the desired direction of motion. The "work function" is artificially created and tunable in-situ. The phenomenon is utilized to build a direct terahertz detector, which yields a giant zero-bias photoresponse that exceeds the predictions by known mechanisms by more than 10-fold. This new aspect of light-matter interaction in two-dimensional systems paves the way towards a new class of highly efficient photodetectors covering the entire terahertz range.