|
Photonic Systems Brown Bag Seminar Series
Thursday,
March 23, 2006, at 12 noon RLE
Haus Conf. room 36-428
Critically
Coupled Resonators in Vertical Geometry Using a Planar Mirror
and a 5 nm Thick Absorbing Film
Yaakov
Tischler
We
report the linear optical properties of a critically coupled
resonator (CCR), a thin film structure that can absorb nearly
all of the incident light of a given wavelength in a few nanometer
thick absorbing film. The CCR consists of a dielectric Bragg
reflector (DBR) as the mirror, a (5.1 ± 0.5) nm thick
film of J-aggregated cyanine dye as the absorbing layer, and
a spacer layer of transparent material that separates the
mirror and absorber layer by the correct distance needed for
critical coupling. More than 97% of the incident l c = 584
nm wavelength light is absorbed within the (5.1 ± 0.5)
nm thick absorber layer, corresponding to a peak effective
absorption coefficient of a eff = (6.9 ± 0.7) x10 6
cm -1 . Critical coupling is shown to be achievable with a
variety of material sets, providing several general conditions
are satisfied. Among non-epitaxially grown materials, we can
envision building CCR's with organic polymers that are used
in biological assays and chemical sensors, with molecular
materials that are used in photodetectors and xerographic
photoresistors, and in the emerging uses of colloidally grown
inorganic nanocrystal quantum dots (QDs). Application of the
CCR phenomenon can also facilitate development of single photon
optics where it is desirable to absorb a photon with 100%
probability in the thinnest possible films and colloidally
grown semiconductor saturable absorber mirrors (SESAMS) for
ultra-fast optical modulators. Finally, the connection is
made between the CCR phenomenon and recently demonstrated
microcavity structures that exhibit strong coupling of light
and matter in the form of exciton-polariton resonances to
assist in the development of future devices that operate in
the strong coupling regime.
|