4.7 Article

Improving the quality factors of plasmonic silver cavities for strong coupling with quantum emitters

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 154, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0034739

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The study focused on the impact of the adhesion layer used in the fabrication of metal nanostructures on the spectral linewidths of plasmonic cavities. It was found that reducing the thickness of the adhesion layer could decrease the linewidths of both bright and dark plasmonic modes, leading to an increase in the quality factor of the PCs and facilitating strong-coupling with semiconductor quantum dots.
Plasmonic cavities (PCs) made of metallic nanostructures can concentrate electromagnetic radiation into an ultrasmall volume, where it might strongly interact with quantum emitters. In recent years, there has been much interest in studying such a strong coupling in the limit of single emitters. However, the lossy nature of PCs, reflected in their broad spectra, limits their quality factors and hence their performance as cavities. Here, we study the effect of the adhesion layer used in the fabrication of metal nanostructures on the spectral linewidths of bowtie-structured PCs. Using dark-field microspectroscopy, as well as electron energy loss spectroscopy, it is found that a reduction in the thickness of the chromium adhesion layer we use from 3 nm to 0.1 nm decreases the linewidths of both bright and dark plasmonic modes. We further show that it is possible to fabricate bowtie PCs without any adhesion layer, in which case the linewidth may be narrowed by as much as a factor of 2. Linewidth reduction increases the quality factor of these PCs accordingly, and it is shown to facilitate reaching the strong-coupling regime with semiconductor quantum dots.

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