4.6 Review

Physics and Applications of High-β Micro- and Nanolasers

Journal

ADVANCED OPTICAL MATERIALS
Volume 9, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adom.202100415

Keywords

Fano lasers; high-beta lasers; microlasers; nanolasers; neuromorphic computing; quantum nanophotonics; thresholdless lasing

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [Re2974/20-1, Re2974/21-1, Re2974/29-1, WI1986/11-1]
  2. Volkswagen Foundation
  3. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework ERC [615613, 834410]
  4. Region PACA and Investments for the Future programme under the Universite Cote d'Azur UCA-JEDI project [ANR-15-IDEX-01]
  5. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF147]
  6. United States Army Research Office Award [W911NF-17-1-0312]
  7. Air Force Office of Scientific Research Award [FA2386-18-1-4086]
  8. Humboldt Foundation's Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award
  9. Projekt DEAL
  10. European Research Council (ERC) [834410, 615613] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Micro- and nanolasers are emerging optoelectronic components that offer opportunities to explore fundamental physical questions and have diverse applications. Exciting developments include advancements in the physical understanding of light emission from high-beta lasers and emerging nanolaser concepts based on Fano resonators, topological photonics, and 2D materials. The future prospects and application scenarios of high-beta lasers in integrated photonics, quantum nanophotonics, and neuromorphic computing are also discussed.
Micro- and nanolasers are emerging optoelectronic components with many properties still to be explored and understood. On the one hand, they make it possible to address fundamental physical questions in the border area between classical physics and quantum physics, on the other hand, they open up new application perspectives in many areas of photonics. This progress report provides an overview of the exciting developments from conventional semiconductor lasers toward nanoscale lasers, whose function relies on increased light-matter interaction in low-mode-volume resonators and unconventional gain concepts. The latest advances in the physical understanding of light emission from high-beta lasers, in which a large part of the spontaneous emission is coupled into the laser mode, are highlighted. In the limit of beta = 1, this leads to thresholdless lasing and it is shown that quantum optical characterization is required to fully explore the underlying emission processes. In addition, emerging nanolaser concepts based on Fano resonators, topological photonics, and 2D materials are presented. Open questions, future prospects, and application scenarios of high-beta lasers in integrated photonics, quantum nanophotonics, and neuromorphic computing are discussed.

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