| Literature DB >> 25266779 |
Sara Ek1, Per Lunnemann1, Yaohui Chen1, Elizaveta Semenova1, Kresten Yvind1, Jesper Mork1.
Abstract
Passive photonic crystals have been shown to exhibit a multitude of interesting phenomena, including slow-light propagation in line-defect waveguides. It was suggested that by incorporating an active material in the waveguide, slow light could be used to enhance the effective gain of the material, which would have interesting application prospects, for example enabling ultra-compact optical amplifiers for integration in photonic chips. Here we experimentally investigate the gain of a photonic crystal membrane structure with embedded quantum wells. We find that by solely changing the photonic crystal structural parameters, the maximum value of the gain coefficient can be increased compared with a ridge waveguide structure and at the same time the spectral position of the peak gain be controlled. The experimental results are in qualitative agreement with theory and show that gain values similar to those realized in state-of-the-art semiconductor optical amplifiers should be attainable in compact photonic integrated amplifiers.Year: 2014 PMID: 25266779 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms6039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919