44 research outputs found
Transport of topologically protected photonic waveguide on chip
We propose a new design on integrated optical devices on-chip with an extra
width degree of freedom by using a photonic crystal waveguide with Dirac points
between two photonic crystals with opposite valley Chern numbers. With such an
extra waveguide, we demonstrate numerically that the topologically protected
photonic waveguide keeps properties of valley-locking and immunity to defects.
Due to the design flexibility of the width-tunable topologically protected
photonic waveguide, many unique on-chip integrated devices have been proposed,
such as energy concentrators with a concentration efficiency improvement by
more than one order of magnitude, topological photonic power splitter with
arbitrary power splitting ratio. The topologically protected photonic waveguide
with the width degree of freedom could be beneficial for scaling up photonic
devices, which provides a new flexible platform to implement integrated
photonic networks on chip.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Non-orthogonal cavity modes near exceptional points in the far field
Non-orthogonal eigenstates are a fundamental feature of non-Hermitian systems
and are accompanied by the emergence of nontrivial features. However, the
platforms to explore non-Hermitian mode couplings mainly measure near-field
effects, and the far-field behaviour remain mostly unexplored. Here, we study
how a microcavity with non-Hermitian mode coupling exhibits eigenstate
non-orthogonality by investigating the spatial field and the far-field
polarization of cavity modes. The non-Hermiticity arises from asymmetric
backscattering, which is controlled by integrating two scatterers of different
size and location into a microdisk. We observe that the spatial field overlaps
of two modes increases abruptly to its maximum value, whilst different
far-field elliptical polarizations of two modes coalesce when approaching an
exceptional point. We demonstrate such features experimentally by measuring the
far-field polarization from the fabricated microdisks. Our work reveals the
non-orthogonality in the far-field degree of freedom, and the integrability of
the microdisks paves a way to integrate more non-Hermitian optical properties
into nanophotonic systems.Comment: 11pages, 4 figure
Single charge control of localized excitons in heterostructures with ferroelectric thin films and two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides
Single charge control of localized excitons (LXs) in two-dimensional
transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) is crucial for potential applications
in quantum information processing and storage. However, traditional
electrostatic doping method with applying metallic gates onto TMDCs may cause
the inhomogeneous charge distribution, optical quench, and energy loss. Here,
by locally controlling the ferroelectric polarization of the ferroelectric thin
film BiFeO3 (BFO) with a scanning probe, we can deterministically manipulate
the doping type of monolayer WSe2 to achieve the p-type and n-type doping. This
nonvolatile approach can maintain the doping type and hold the localized
excitonic charges for a long time without applied voltage. Our work
demonstrated that ferroelectric polarization of BFO can control the charges of
LXs effectively. Neutral and charged LXs have been observed in different
ferroelectric polarization regions, confirmed by magnetic optical measurement.
Highly circular polarization degree about 90 % of the photon emission from
these quantum emitters have been achieved in high magnetic fields. Controlling
single charge of LXs in a non-volatile way shows a great potential for
deterministic photon emission with desired charge states for photonic long-term
memory.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Asymmetric Chiral Coupling in a Topological Resonator
Chiral light-matter interactions supported by topological edge modes at the
interface of valley photonic crystals provide a robust method to implement the
unidirectional spin transfer. The valley topological photonic crystals possess
a pair of counterpropagating edge modes. The edge modes are robust against the
sharp bend of and , which can form a resonator with
whispering gallery modes. Here, we demonstrate the asymmetric emission of
chiral coupling from single quantum dots in a topological resonator by tuning
the coupling between a quantum emitter and a resonator mode. Under a magnetic
field in Faraday configuration, the exciton state from a single quantum dot
splits into two exciton spin states with opposite circularly polarized
emissions due to Zeeman effect. Two branches of the quantum dot emissions
couple to a resonator mode in different degrees, resulting in an asymmetric
chiral emission. Without the demanding of site-control of quantum emitters for
chiral quantum optics, an extra degree of freedom to tune the chiral contrast
with a topological resonator could be useful for the development of on-chip
integrated photonic circuits.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Controllable Spin-Resolved Photon Emission Enhanced by Slow-Light Mode in Photonic Crystal Waveguides on Chip
We report the slow-light enhanced spin-resolved in-plane emission from a
single quantum dot (QD) in a photonic crystal waveguide (PCW). The slow light
dispersions in PCWs are designed to match the emission wavelengths of single
QDs. The resonance between two spin states emitted from a single QD and a slow
light mode of a waveguide is investigated under a magnetic field with Faraday
configuration. Two spin states of a single QD experience different degrees of
enhancement as their emission wavelengths are shifted by combining diamagnetic
and Zeeman effects with an optical excitation power control. A circular
polarization degree up to 0.81 is achieved by changing the off-resonant
excitation power. Strongly polarized photon emission enhanced by a slow light
mode shows great potential to attain controllable spin-resolved photon sources
for integrated optical quantum networks on chip.Comment: 7 pages,5 figure