Absorption Engineering in an Ultrasubwavelength Quantum System

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Abstract

Many photonic and plasmonic structures have been proposed to achieve ultrasubwavelength light confinement across the electromagnetic spectrum. Notwithstanding this effort, however, the efficient funneling of external radiation into nanoscale volumes remains problematic. Here, we demonstrate a photonic concept that fulfills the seemingly incompatible requirements for both strong electromagnetic confinement and impedance matching to free space. Our architecture consists of antenna-coupled meta-atom resonators that funnel up to 90% of the incident radiation into an ultrasubwavelength semiconductor quantum well absorber of volume V = λ310-6. A significant fraction of the coupled electromagnetic energy is used to excite the electronic transitions in the quantum well, with a photon absorption efficiency 550 times larger than the intrinsic value of the electronic dipole. This system opens important perspectives for ultralow dark current quantum detectors and for the study of light-matter interaction in the extreme regimes of electronic and photonic confinement.

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Jeannin, M., Bonazzi, T., Gacemi, D., Vasanelli, A., Li, L., Davies, A. G., … Todorov, Y. (2020). Absorption Engineering in an Ultrasubwavelength Quantum System. Nano Letters, 20(6), 4430–4436. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01217

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