The emergence of dielectric open optical cavities has opened a new research avenue in nanophotonics. In particular, dielectric microspheres support a rich set of cavity modes with varying spectral characteristics, making them an ideal platform to study molecule-cavity interactions. The symmetry of the structure plays a critical role in the outcoupling of these modes and, hence, the perceived molecule-cavity coupling strength. Here, we experimentally and theoretically study molecule-cavity coupling mediated by the Mie scattering modes of a dielectric microsphere placed on a glass substrate and excited with far-field illumination, from which we collect scattering signatures both in the air and glass sides. Glass-side collection reveals clear signatures of strong molecule-cavity coupling (coupling strength 2g = 74 meV), in contrast to the air-side scattering signal. Rigorous electromagnetic modeling allows us to understand molecule-cavity coupling and unravel the role played by the spatial mode profile in the observed coupling strength.
CITATION STYLE
Vasista, A. B., Dias, E. J. C., De Abajo, F. J. G., & Barnes, W. L. (2022). Role of Symmetry Breaking in Observing Strong Molecule-Cavity Coupling Using Dielectric Microspheres. Nano Letters, 22(16), 6737–6743. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c02274
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