| Literature DB >> 27087832 |
Kevin A Twedt1, Jie Zou1, Marcelo Davanco2, Kartik Srinivasan2, Jabez J McClelland2, Vladimir A Aksyuk2.
Abstract
Optical microresonators have proven powerful in a wide range of applications, including cavity quantum electrodynamics1-3, biosensing4, microfludics5, and cavity optomechanics6-8. Their performance depends critically on the exact distribution of optical energy, confined and shaped by the nanoscale device geometry. Near-field optical probes9 can image this distribution, but the physical probe necessarily perturbs the near field, which is particularly problematic for sensitive high quality factor resonances10,11. We present a new approach to mapping nanophotonic modes that uses a controllably small and local optomechanical perturbation introduced by a focused lithium ion beam12. An ion beam (radius ≈50 nm) induces a picometer-scale dynamic deformation of the resonator surface, which we detect through a shift in the optical resonance wavelength. We map five modes of a silicon microdisk resonator (Q≥20,000) with both high spatial and spectral resolution. Our technique also enables in-situ observation of ion implantation damage and relaxation dynamics in a silicon lattice13,14.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 27087832 PMCID: PMC4832418 DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2015.248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Photonics ISSN: 1749-4885 Impact factor: 38.771