| Literature DB >> 32194947 |
Amit Raj Dhawan1,2, Cherif Belacel2,3, Juan Uriel Esparza-Villa2, Michel Nasilowski4, Zhiming Wang1, Catherine Schwob2, Jean-Paul Hugonin5, Laurent Coolen2, Benoît Dubertret4, Pascale Senellart3, Agnès Maître2.
Abstract
Coupling nano-emitters to plasmonic antennas is a key milestone for the development of nanoscale quantum light sources. One challenge, however, is the precise nanoscale positioning of the emitter in the structure. Here, we present a laser etching protocol that deterministically positions a single colloidal CdSe/CdS core/shell quantum dot emitter inside a subwavelength plasmonic patch antenna with three-dimensional nanoscale control. By exploiting the properties of metal-insulator-metal structures at the nanoscale, the fabricated single-emitter antenna exhibits a very high-Purcell factor (>72) and a brightness enhancement of a factor of 70. Due to the unprecedented quenching of Auger processes and the strong acceleration of the multiexciton emission, more than 4 photons per pulse can be emitted by a single quantum dot, thus increasing the device yield. Our technology can be applied to a wide range of photonic nanostructures and emitters, paving the way for scalable and reliable fabrication of ultra-compact light sources.Entities:
Keywords: Nanophotonics and plasmonics; Quantum dots
Year: 2020 PMID: 32194947 PMCID: PMC7054275 DOI: 10.1038/s41377-020-0269-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Light Sci Appl ISSN: 2047-7538 Impact factor: 17.782
Fig. 1A plasmonic patch antenna coupled to a single colloidal quantum dot.
a Schematic of the structure under study consisting of a single colloidal core/shell QD coupled to a plasmonic patch antenna. b Schematic and transmission electron microscopy image of the investigated emitters
Fig. 2In situ laser etching for the deterministic assembly of single-emitter plasmonic antenna nanostructures.
Figures (a–e) illustrate the in situ laser etching protocol used to fabricate the antennas (see the details in the text). The image at the top right of (a) shows a confocal image of the emission from a QD, and the image on the top of (b) shows the AFM topography and height profile of a hole etched by the laser into the resist bi-layer. The undercut created by the selective etching of the LOR (c) allows the lift-off in step (d) of the lithography to produce the single-emitter antennas (e). The image above (e) depicts the AFM image and corresponding height profile of a fabricated antenna patch. f Emission lifetime of a QD before (blue) and after (red) laser etching
Fig. 3Topography and emission pattern of the emitter-antenna structures.
a AFM image of a small patch antenna and b the corresponding height profiles. c Electron-multiplying charge-coupled device (EMCCD) camera image of the radiation pattern of the same antenna measured in the far field by imaging the Fourier plane of the QD emission and d the associated polar plot. e (θ, φ) polar plot of the numerically simulated emission pattern of a similar elliptical patch antenna and f the polar plot along the maximum intensity axis
Fig. 4Emission characteristics of a highly accelerated antenna.
a Fluorescence decay of the QD before (blue line) and after (red line) it is placed inside the antenna. The instrument response function is shown in black. b Normalized photon coincidences measured for the QD before insertion in the antenna and c inside the antenna under a pulsed excitation of 0.03 W/cm2 at 405 nm. d QD energy-level diagram showing the biexciton (BX), exciton (X), and ground states. e Detected photon rate (red) and the corresponding photon emission rate after the detection efficiency correction (green). The blue line denotes the pulsed laser repetition rate
Fig. 5Fluorescence enhancement by a plasmonic antenna.
a, b Fluorescence microscopy image of the antenna excited by a mercury lamp at 438 ± 12 nm and captured by a CCD camera with an acquisition time of 10 ms (a) or 200 ms (b). The fluorescing antenna is encircled in yellow. Note that the two lighter spots above and below the saturated antenna spot in (b) are reflections on the protecting glass before the CCD camera sensor. c Photon detection rate from the QD before (blue) and after (red) it is placed inside the antenna. The antenna is excited at 405 nm with a pulsed laser at 2.5 MHz