4.8 Article

Lithographically Defined, Room Temperature Low Threshold Subwavelength Red-Emitting Hybrid Plasmonic Lasers

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 12, Pages 7822-7828

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b04017

Keywords

Plasmonic lasers; top-down lithography; AlGaInP heterostructures; enhanced stimulated emission; Purcell effect

Funding

  1. Science Foundation Ireland National Access Programme [444]
  2. Science Foundation Ireland [12/RC/2276, 10/IN.1/I3000, 11/PI/1117]
  3. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2015CB932400]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11134013, 11227407]
  5. Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) [11/PI/1117] Funding Source: Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)

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Hybrid plasmonic lasers provide deep sub wavelength optical confinement, strongly enhanced light-matter interaction and together with nanoscale footprint promise new applications in optical communication, biosensing, and photolithography. The subwavelength hybrid plasmonic lasers reported so far often use bottom-up grown nanowires, nanorods, and nanosquares, making it difficult to integrate these devices into industry-relevant high density plasmonic circuits. Here, we report the first experimental demonstration of AlGaInP based, red-emitting hybrid plasmonic lasers at room temperature using lithography based fabrication processes. Resonant cavities with deep subwavelength 2D and 3D mode confinement of lambda(2)/56 and lambda(3)/199, respectively, are demonstrated. A range of cavity geometries (waveguides, rings, squares, and disks) show very low lasing thresholds of 0.6-1.8 mJ/cm(2) with wide gain bandwidth (610 nm-685 nm), which are attributed to the heterogeneous geometry of the gain material, the optimized etching technique, and the strong overlap of the gain material with the plasmonic modes. Most importantly, we establish the connection between mode confinements and enhanced absorption and stimulated emission, which plays critical roles in maintaining low lasing thresholds at extremely small hybrid plasmonic cavities. Our results pave the way for the further integration of dense arrays of hybrid plasmonic lasers with optical and electronic technology platforms.

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