The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Engineering the Spectral and Spatial Dispersion of Thermal Emission via Strong Coupling

Engineering the Spectral and Spatial Dispersion of Thermal Emission via Strong Coupling
Engineering the Spectral and Spatial Dispersion of Thermal Emission via Strong Coupling
Phonon polaritons are quasiparticles comprising a photon and a coherently oscillating charge on a polar lattice, which are supported in the form of propagating (SPhP) and localized surface phonon polaritons (LSPhP). The promising properties of LSPhP modes are exceptionally high predicted Purcell enhancements and narrow resonance linewidths, with the potential for near-unity absorption (emissivity). However, one drawback is that as a highly localized mode, they offer no significant degree of spatial coherence (directionality) for thermal emission applications. Alternatively, high spatial coherence can be achieved using propagating SPhPs launched by grating elements. However, the non-localized nature of such propagating modes yields thermal emission into frequency-specific angles across the entire Reststrahlen band where such modes can be supported. The introduction of strong coupling between different polaritonic modes, therefore, provides us an opportunity to combine the virtues of the narrowband LSPhP resonances with the high spatial coherence associated with propagating SPhPs into a novel, mixed character polariton. Further, it has been proposed that strong coupling between LSPhPs with zone-folded longitudinal optic phonons (ZFLO) could provide a mechanism to use the longitudinal fields of an electrical bias to stimulate the transverse fields of SPhPs through Ohmic loss. Thus, we propose that through inducing strong coupling between LSPhPs, propagating SPhPs, and ZFLO phonons, that realization of a narrow-band, spatially coherent emitter amenable to electrically driven emission could be possible. Additionally, through coupling to such a ZFLO mode, the extremely narrow linewidths could be employed via strong coupling to further reduce the linewidths of the SPhP modes. In this work, we report on three-oscillator strong coupling within a SPhP platform using nanopillar arrays fabricated into a 4H-SiC substrate. Here, we experimentally manipulate the dispersion relation of coupled SPhP modes by strongly coupling LSPhPs, propagating SPhPs, with the ZFLO. In the strong coupling regime, the formation of such hybrid modes with mixed character is expected. Furthermore, the strength of the interactions between such optical modes can be precisely controlled through the hybridization of three oscillators. We further report on the influence of such strong coupling upon thermal emission within the long-wave-IR (LWIR), demonstrating significant narrowing of the spectral and spatial dispersion of the individual modes within this strongly coupled regime. In our three-oscillator strong coupling platform, we simultaneously demonstrate a five-fold reduction in the angular spread of the thermally emitted light and a three-fold enhancement of the quality factor over that of the uncoupled LSPhP mode at the anti-crossing point where the splitting occurs. Furthermore, the high Q-factors (over 200) achieved are realized using traditional photolithography, enabling such devices to be produced at large-scale and reasonable costs. Our results demonstrate that by leveraging three-oscillator strong coupling that the spectral and spatial dispersion of thermal emission can be engineered for a variety of LWIR applications extending from spectroscopy, sensing, to free-space communications.
Lu, Guanyu
c14b34b7-7e94-4a2d-903a-25112b2007f8
Gubbin, Christopher
09b75073-7a9a-4443-9a84-1458ec2535e9
Nolen, J. Ryan
be8809ea-4046-4523-8099-be2083f87ad1
Folland, Thomas Graeme
c76f06dc-e9c4-4fb0-9344-ec54e320b7b1
Tadjer, Marko J.
1d88a27e-1e42-4276-b6c3-cbfb95b06439
De Liberato, Simone
5942e45f-3115-4027-8653-a82667ed8473
Caldwell, Joshua D.
a1eb4205-8a65-48cb-9e7b-4213d744970e
Lu, Guanyu
c14b34b7-7e94-4a2d-903a-25112b2007f8
Gubbin, Christopher
09b75073-7a9a-4443-9a84-1458ec2535e9
Nolen, J. Ryan
be8809ea-4046-4523-8099-be2083f87ad1
Folland, Thomas Graeme
c76f06dc-e9c4-4fb0-9344-ec54e320b7b1
Tadjer, Marko J.
1d88a27e-1e42-4276-b6c3-cbfb95b06439
De Liberato, Simone
5942e45f-3115-4027-8653-a82667ed8473
Caldwell, Joshua D.
a1eb4205-8a65-48cb-9e7b-4213d744970e

Lu, Guanyu, Gubbin, Christopher, Nolen, J. Ryan, Folland, Thomas Graeme, Tadjer, Marko J., De Liberato, Simone and Caldwell, Joshua D. (2021) Engineering the Spectral and Spatial Dispersion of Thermal Emission via Strong Coupling. Electronic Materials Conference (EMC). 23 - 25 Jun 2021. (doi:10.48448/w2xz-gw04).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Phonon polaritons are quasiparticles comprising a photon and a coherently oscillating charge on a polar lattice, which are supported in the form of propagating (SPhP) and localized surface phonon polaritons (LSPhP). The promising properties of LSPhP modes are exceptionally high predicted Purcell enhancements and narrow resonance linewidths, with the potential for near-unity absorption (emissivity). However, one drawback is that as a highly localized mode, they offer no significant degree of spatial coherence (directionality) for thermal emission applications. Alternatively, high spatial coherence can be achieved using propagating SPhPs launched by grating elements. However, the non-localized nature of such propagating modes yields thermal emission into frequency-specific angles across the entire Reststrahlen band where such modes can be supported. The introduction of strong coupling between different polaritonic modes, therefore, provides us an opportunity to combine the virtues of the narrowband LSPhP resonances with the high spatial coherence associated with propagating SPhPs into a novel, mixed character polariton. Further, it has been proposed that strong coupling between LSPhPs with zone-folded longitudinal optic phonons (ZFLO) could provide a mechanism to use the longitudinal fields of an electrical bias to stimulate the transverse fields of SPhPs through Ohmic loss. Thus, we propose that through inducing strong coupling between LSPhPs, propagating SPhPs, and ZFLO phonons, that realization of a narrow-band, spatially coherent emitter amenable to electrically driven emission could be possible. Additionally, through coupling to such a ZFLO mode, the extremely narrow linewidths could be employed via strong coupling to further reduce the linewidths of the SPhP modes. In this work, we report on three-oscillator strong coupling within a SPhP platform using nanopillar arrays fabricated into a 4H-SiC substrate. Here, we experimentally manipulate the dispersion relation of coupled SPhP modes by strongly coupling LSPhPs, propagating SPhPs, with the ZFLO. In the strong coupling regime, the formation of such hybrid modes with mixed character is expected. Furthermore, the strength of the interactions between such optical modes can be precisely controlled through the hybridization of three oscillators. We further report on the influence of such strong coupling upon thermal emission within the long-wave-IR (LWIR), demonstrating significant narrowing of the spectral and spatial dispersion of the individual modes within this strongly coupled regime. In our three-oscillator strong coupling platform, we simultaneously demonstrate a five-fold reduction in the angular spread of the thermally emitted light and a three-fold enhancement of the quality factor over that of the uncoupled LSPhP mode at the anti-crossing point where the splitting occurs. Furthermore, the high Q-factors (over 200) achieved are realized using traditional photolithography, enabling such devices to be produced at large-scale and reasonable costs. Our results demonstrate that by leveraging three-oscillator strong coupling that the spectral and spatial dispersion of thermal emission can be engineered for a variety of LWIR applications extending from spectroscopy, sensing, to free-space communications.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: 24 June 2021
Venue - Dates: Electronic Materials Conference (EMC), 2021-06-23 - 2021-06-25

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457354
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457354
PURE UUID: 57de303b-33bf-4f6c-ae8b-5713e8250cbc
ORCID for Christopher Gubbin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3988-028X
ORCID for Simone De Liberato: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4851-2633

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Jun 2022 16:45
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:31

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Guanyu Lu
Author: Christopher Gubbin ORCID iD
Author: J. Ryan Nolen
Author: Thomas Graeme Folland
Author: Marko J. Tadjer
Author: Joshua D. Caldwell

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×