4.8 Article

Resonant Light Guiding Along a Chain of Silicon Nanoparticles

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 3458-3464

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b00381

Keywords

Silicon nanoparticle; silicon photonics; waveguide; optically induced magnetic resonances; NSOM

Funding

  1. DSI core funds
  2. A*STAR SERC Pharos program (Singapore) [152 73 00025]

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Subwavelength confined waveguiding is experimentally demonstrated with high refractive index dielectric nanoparticles with photon energy propagation at distances beyond 500 m. These particles have naturally occurring electric and magnetic dipole resonances. When they are placed in a 1D chain, the magnetic resonances of adjacent elements couple to each other, providing a means to transport energy at visible or NIR wavelengths in a confined mode. Chains of nanoparticles made of silicon were fabricated and guided waves were measured with near-field scanning optical microscopy. Propagation loss is quantified at 34 dB/mm for 720 nm and 5.5 dB/mm for 960 nm wavelengths with 150 and 220 nm diameter particles, respectively. Simulations confirm the unique properties of this waveguiding in comparison with photonic crystals. The resonant nature of the waveguide lays a foundation for integrated photonics beyond nanowire waveguides of silicon and silicon nitride. This technology is promising for more compact and deeper photonic integration such as right angle bends, more compact modulators, slow light and interfacing with single photon emitters for photonic integrated circuits, quantum communications, and biosensing.

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