| Literature DB >> 28045127 |
Yi-Cheng Chung1, Pi-Ju Cheng2, Yu-Hsun Chou3,4, Bo-Tsun Chou5, Kuo-Bin Hong4, Jheng-Hong Shih1, Sheng-Di Lin5, Tien-Chang Lu4, Tzy-Rong Lin1,6.
Abstract
We systematically investigate the effects of surface roughness on the characteristics of ultraviolet zinc oxide plasmonic nanolasers fabricated on aluminium films with two different degrees of surface roughness. We demonstrate that the effective dielectric functions of aluminium interfaces with distinct roughness can be analysed from reflectivity measurements. By considering the scattering losses, including Rayleigh scattering, electron scattering, and grain boundary scattering, we adopt the modified Drude-Lorentz model to describe the scattering effect caused by surface roughness and obtain the effective dielectric functions of different Al samples. The sample with higher surface roughness induces more electron scattering and light scattering for SPP modes, leading to a higher threshold gain for the plasmonic nanolaser. By considering the pumping efficiency, our theoretical analysis shows that diminishing the detrimental optical losses caused by the roughness of the metallic interface could effectively lower (~33.1%) the pumping threshold of the plasmonic nanolasers, which is consistent with the experimental results.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28045127 PMCID: PMC5206644 DOI: 10.1038/srep39813
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) The schematic diagram of scattering on the surface and a set of experimental devices for measurement of reflectivity spectra. (b) The measured and fitted reflectivity spectra for sample A and sample B films. (c,d) 5 × 5 μm2 atomic force microscope images of the sample A and sample B films. (e,f) The FFT spectra for sample A and sample B AFM images.
Figure 2(a,b) are the real and imaginary parts of the permittivity of Al for our data and the data of the two references, respectively. The quality factor of the SPP mode is shown in (c).
Figure 3(a) The schematic diagram of an SPP nanolaser containing a ZnO nanowire on a SiO2-Al slab. (b) The SEM picture of a single ZnO nanowire lying on sample B film with a SiO2 spacer layer. The length of the ZnO nanowires is about 1.2 μm, and the growing direction lies along the c-axis of the wurtzite structure.
Parameters for the sample A-based and sample B-based cavities relevant to lasing.
| Γwg | gtr (cm−1) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| sample A | 2.70 × 104 | 0.387 | 6.98 × 104 | 2.63 × 10−2 | 1.48 × 105 |
| sample B | 7.19 × 104 | 0.413 | 1.74 × 105 | 2.53 × 10−2 | 2.47 × 105 |
Figure 4Lasing characteristics of an SPP nanolaser at 77 K.
(a,c) The measurement spectrum of ZnO/SiO2/sample A and ZnO/SiO2/sample B. The inset shows a polarisation direction parallel to the nanowire. (b,d) The red sphere shows the corresponding light-light curve of (a,c), and the blue sphere shows the line width extracted from (a,c).