4.8 Article

Wedge Waveguides and Resonators for Quantum Plasmonics

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 15, Issue 9, Pages 6267-6275

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b03051

Keywords

Plasmonic waveguides; plasmonic resonators; quantum plasmonics; semiconductor nanocrystals; colloidal quantum dots; nanophotonics

Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP)/ERC [339905]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [146180]

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Plasmonic structures can provide deep-subwavelength electromagnetic fields that are useful for enhancing light-matter interactions. However, because these localized modes are also dissipative, structures that offer the best compromise between field confinement and loss have been sought. Metallic wedge waveguides were initially identified as an ideal candidate but have been largely abandoned because to date their experimental performance has been limited. We combine state-of-the-art metallic wedges with integrated reflectors and precisely placed colloidal quantum dots (down to the single-emitter level) and demonstrate quantum-plasmonic waveguides and resonators with performance approaching theoretical limits. By exploiting a nearly 10-fold improvement in wedge-plasmon propagation (19 mu m at a vacuum wavelength, lambda(vac), of 630 nm), efficient reflectors (93%), and effective coupling (estimated to be >70%) to highly emissive (similar to 90%) quantum dots, we obtain Ag plasmonic resonators at visible wavelengths with quality factors approaching 200 (3.3 nm line widths). As our structures offer modal volumes down to similar to 0.004 lambda(3)(vac) in an exposed single-mode waveguide-resonator geometry, they provide advantages over both traditional photonic microcavities and localized-plasmonic resonators for enhancing light-matter interactions. Our results confirm the promise of wedges for creating plasmonic devices and for studying coherent quantum-plasmonic effects such as long-distance plasmon-mediated entanglement and strong plasmon matter coupling.

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