We demonstrate room-temperature strong coupling between a mid-infrared (λ = 9.9 μm) intersubband transition and the fundamental cavity mode of a metal-insulator-metal resonator. Patterning of the resonator surface enables surface-coupling of the radiation and introduces an energy dispersion which can be probed with angle-resolved reflectivity. In particular, the polaritonic dispersion presents an accessible energy minimum at k = 0 where - potentially - polaritons can accumulate. We also show that it is possible to maximize the coupling of photons into the polaritonic states and - simultaneously - to engineer the position of the minimum Rabi splitting at a desired value of the in-plane wavevector. This can be precisely accomplished via a simple post-processing technique. The results are confirmed using the temporal coupled mode theory formalism and their significance in the context of the strong critical coupling concept is highlighted. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC.
CITATION STYLE
Manceau, J. M., Zanotto, S., Ongarello, T., Sorba, L., Tredicucci, A., Biasiol, G., & Colombelli, R. (2014). Mid-infrared intersubband polaritons in dispersive metal-insulator-metal resonators. Applied Physics Letters, 105(8). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4893730
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