Sub-wavelength probing and modification of photonic crystal nano-cavities (original) (raw)
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We report on a nonlinear way to control and tune the dielectric environment of photonic crystal microcavities exploiting the local heating induced by near-field laser excitation at different excitation powers. The temperature gradient due to the optical absorption results in an index of refraction gradient which modifies the dielectric surroundings of the cavity and shifts the optical modes. Reversible tuning can be obtained either by changing the excitation power density or by exciting in different points of the photonic crystal microcavity.
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The influence of a near-field tip on the spectral characteristics of a resonant mode of an active photonic crystal micro-cavity was investigated. The wavelength shift of the mode was theoretically and experimentally demonstrated and evaluated as a function of the nature and the position of the tip above the cavity. Experiment showed that the shift induced is ten times higher with a Si-coated silica probe than with a bare silica tip: a shift until 2 nm was reached with Si-coated tip whereas the shift with bare silica tip is in the range of the tenth of nanometer, for wavelengths around 1,55 microm.
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The fundamentals of the near-field interaction between a subwavelength metallic tip and a photonic-crystal nanocavity are investigated experimentally and theoretically. It is shown experimentally that the cavity resonance is tuned without any degradation by the presence of the tip and that the reported near-field interaction is strongly related to the field distribution within the nanostructure. Then, in light of a perturbation theory, we show that this interaction is selectively related to the electric field or magnetic field distribution within the cavity, depending on the tip properties.
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The optical near field of a high-Q and ultrasmall volume photonic crystal nanocavity is visualized with a subwavelength resolution by using a scanning near-field optical microscope ͑SNOM͒ operating at the same time in collection-scanning mode and in interaction-scanning mode. It is shown that the nanocavity resonant mode is selectively visualized by using the SNOM interaction-scanning mode while the whole electromagnetic field surrounding the nanocavity is probed using the SNOM collection-scanning mode. The different optical near-field images are compared in light of a three-dimensional numerical analysis and we demonstrate an unexpected mode coupling at the cavity resonance.
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We discuss recent progress and the exciting potential of scanning probe microscopy methods for the characterization and control of photonic crystals. We demonstrate that scanning near-field optical microscopy can be used to characterize the performance of photonic crystal device components on the sub-wavelength scale. In addition, we propose scanning probe techniques for realizing local, low-loss tuning of photonic crystal resonances, based on the frequency shifts that high-index nanoscopic probes can induce. Finally, we discuss prospects for on-demand spontaneous emission control. We demonstrate theoretically that photonic crystal membranes induce large variations in spontaneous emission rate over length scales of 50 nm that can be probed by single light sources, or nanoscopic ensembles of light sources attached to the end of a scanning probe. #
2007 European Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics and the International Quantum Electronics Conference, 2007
While a field effect transistor allows to modulate or switch on and off the flow of electrons, it has been a long-standing goal to make a nanodevice able to control the flow of photons on a chip. To challenge this objective, one needs both to localize photons at a subwavelength scale and to locally tune the material properties, by thermo or electro-optics effects 1-3 for instance.
Optics Letters, 2006
We present a direct, room-temperature near-field optical study of light confinement by a subwavelength defect microcavity in a photonic crystal slab containing quantum-well sources. The observations are compared with three-dimensional finite-difference time-domain calculations, and excellent agreement is found. Moreover, we use a subwavelength cavity to study the influence of a near-field probe on the imaging of localized optical modes.