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Improving emission uniformity and linearizing band dispersion in nanowire arrays using quasi-aperiodicity

Optical Materials Express

Anderson, P.D.; Koleske, Daniel K.; Povinelli, Michelle L.; Subramania, Ganapathi S.

We experimentally investigate a new class of quasi-aperiodic structures for improving the emission pattern in nanowire arrays. Efficient normal emission, as well as lasing, can be obtained from III-nitride photonic crystal (PhC) nanowire arrays that utilize slow group velocity modes near the G-point in reciprocal space. However, due to symmetry considerations, the emitted far-field pattern of such modes are often 'donut'-like. Many applications, including lighting for displays or lasers, require a more uniform beam profile in the far-field. Previous work has improved far-field beam uniformity of uncoupled modes by changing the shape of the emitting structure. However, in nanowire systems, the shape of nanowires cannot always be arbitrarily changed due to growth or etch considerations. Here, we investigate breaking symmetry by instead changing the position of emitters. Using a quasi-aperiodic geometry, which changes the emitter position within a photonic crystal supercell (2x2), we are able to linearize the photonic bandstructure near the G-point and greatly improve emitted far-field uniformity. We realize the III-nitride nanowires structures using a top-down fabrication procedure that produces nanowires with smooth, vertical sidewalls. Comparison of room-temperature micro-photoluminescence (μ-PL) measurements between periodic and quasi-aperiodic nanowire arrays reveal resonances in each structure, with the simple periodic structure producing a donut beam in the emitted far-field and the quasi-aperiodic structure producing a uniform Gaussian-like beam. We investigate the input pump power vs. output intensity in both systems and observe the simple periodic array exhibiting a non-linear relationship, indicative of lasing. We believe that the quasi-aperiodic approach studied here provides an alternate and promising strategy for shaping the emission pattern of nanoemitter systems.

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Deterministically placed quantum dots for quantum nanophotonics

International Conference on Transparent Optical Networks

Subramania, Ganapathi S.; Fischer, Arthur J.; Anderson, P.D.; Koleske, Daniel K.

The ability to achieve deterministic placement of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) opens up interesting possibilities for nanophotonic devices. By incorporating these QDs within microcavities, light-matter interaction can be tailored and enhanced, enabling phenomenon such as spontaneous emission enhancement, low threshold lasing, single photon emission and strong-coupling. The quality of these phenomena relies on the distribution of emission wavelengths of the emitter dipoles and the strength of their coupling to internal fields of the cavity. Therefore size-controlled fabrication of QDs and their deterministic placement become quite important. In this work we will describe a photoelectrochemical-based etching of III-nitride materials to achieve QDs with uniform emission wavelength. By patterning using electron beam lithography to create a nanopost structure in an epitaxially grown III-nitride based quantum well structure, we will show potential for deterministic placement. The photoluminescence response from the nanopost structure after photoelectrochemical etching reveals sharp lines indicative of quantum dot formation.

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An Efficient Holographic Huygens? Metasurface based on Dielectric Resonant Meta-Atoms

Brener, Igal B.; Chong, Katie E.; wang, lei w.; Staude, Isabelle S.; Decker, Manuel D.; Neshev, Dragomir N.; Kivshar, Yuri S.; James, Anthony R.; Dominguez, Jason J.; Subramania, Ganapathi S.; Liu, Sheng L.

Subwavelength-thin metasurfaces have shown great promises for the control of optical wavefronts, thus opening new pathways for the development of efficient flat optics. In particular, Huygens’ metasurfaces based on all-dielectric resonant meta-atoms have already shown a huge potential for practical applications with their polarization insensitivity and high transmittance efficiency. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a holographic Huygens’ metasurface based on dielectric resonant meta-atoms capable of complex wavefront control at telecom wavelengths. Our metasurface produces a hologram image in the far-field with 82% transmittance efficiency and 40% imaging efficiency. Such efficient complex wavefront control shows that Huygens’ metasurfaces based on resonant dielectric meta-atoms are a big step towards practical applications of metasurfaces in wavefront design related technologies, including computer-generated holograms, ultra-thin optics, security and data storage devices.

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Polarization-Independent Silicon Metadevices for Efficient Optical Wavefront Control

Nano Letters

Chong, Katie E.; Staude, Isabelle; James, Anthony R.; Dominguez, Jason J.; Liu, Sheng L.; Campione, Salvatore; Subramania, Ganapathi S.; Luk, Ting S.; Decker, Manuel; Neshev, Dragomir N.; Brener, Igal B.; Kivshar, Yuri S.

We experimentally demonstrate a functional silicon metadevice at telecom wavelengths that can efficiently control the wavefront of optical beams by imprinting a spatially varying transmittance phase independent of the polarization of the incident beam. Near-unity transmittance efficiency and close to 0-2 phase coverage are enabled by utilizing the localized electric and magnetic Mie-type resonances of low-loss silicon nanoparticles tailored to behave as electromagnetically dual-symmetric scatterers. We apply this concept to realize a metadevice that converts a Gaussian beam into a vortex beam. The required spatial distribution of transmittance phases is achieved by a variation of the lattice spacing as a single geometric control parameter.

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Non-resonant Nanoscale Extreme Light Confinement

Subramania, Ganapathi S.; Huber, Dale L.

A wide spectrum of photonics activities Sandia is engaged in such as solid state lighting, photovoltaics, infrared imaging and sensing, quantum sources, rely on nanoscale or ultrasubwavelength light-matter interactions (LMI). The fundamental understanding in confining electromagnetic power and enhancing electric fields into ever smaller volumes is key to creating next generation devices for these programs. The prevailing view is that a resonant interaction (e.g. in microcavities or surface-plasmon polaritions) is necessary to achieve the necessary light confinement for absorption or emission enhancement. Here we propose new paradigm that is non-resonant and therefore broadband and can achieve light confinement and field enhancement in extremely small areas [~(λ/500)^2 ]. The proposal is based on a theoretical work[1] performed at Sandia. The paradigm structure consists of a periodic arrangement of connected small and large rectangular slits etched into a metal film named double-groove (DG) structure. The degree of electric field enhancement and power confinement can be controlled by the geometry of the structure. The key operational principle is attributed to quasistatic response of the metal electrons to the incoming electromagnetic field that enables non-resonant broadband behavior. For this exploratory LDRD we have fabricated some test double groove structures to enable verification of quasistatic electronic response in the mid IR through IR optical spectroscopy. We have addressed some processing challenges in DG structure fabrication to enable future design of complex sensor and detector geometries that can utilize its non-resonant field enhancement capabilities.].

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Results 26–50 of 114
Results 26–50 of 114