4.8 Article

Room-temperature continuous-wave lasing from monolayer molybdenum ditelluride integrated with a silicon nanobeam cavity

Journal

NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages 987-992

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/NNANO.2017.128

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Funding

  1. 985 University Project of China
  2. Tsinghua University Initiative Scientific Research Program [20141081296]

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Monolayer transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have the potential to become efficient optical-gain materials for low-energy- consumption nanolasers with the smallest gain media because of strong excitonic emission. However, until now TMD-based lasing has been realized only at low temperatures. Here we demonstrate for the first time a room-temperature laser operation in the infrared region from a monolayer of molybdenum ditelluride on a silicon photonic-crystal cavity. The observation is enabled by the unique combination of a TMD monolayer with an emission wavelength transparent to silicon, and a high-Q cavity of the silicon nanobeam. The laser is pumped by a continuous-wave excitation, with a threshold density of 6.6W cm(-2). Its linewidth is as narrow as 0.202 nm with a corresponding Q of 5,603, the largest value reported for a TMD laser. This demonstration establishes TMDs as practical materials for integrated TMD-silicon nanolasers suitable for silicon-based nanophotonic applications in silicon-transparent wavelengths.

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