| Literature DB >> 33837615 |
Jie Fang1, Mingsong Wang1,2, Kan Yao1, Tianyi Zhang3, Alex Krasnok2, Taizhi Jiang4, Junho Choi5, Ethan Kahn3, Brian A Korgel4, Mauricio Terrones3, Xiaoqin Li5, Andrea Alù2,6, Yuebing Zheng1.
Abstract
Coupling emitters with nanoresonators is an effective strategy to control light emission at the subwavelength scale with high efficiency. Low-loss dielectric nanoantennas hold particular promise for this purpose, owing to their strong Mie resonances. Herein, a highly miniaturized platform is explored for the control of emission based on individual subwavelength Si nanospheres (SiNSs) to modulate the directional excitation and exciton emission of 2D transition metal dichalcogenides (2D TMDs). A modified Mie theory for dipole-sphere hybrid systems is derived to instruct the optimal design for desirable modulation performance. Controllable forward-to-backward intensity ratios are experimentally validated in 532 nm laser excitation and 635 nm exciton emission from a monolayer WS2 . Versatile light emission control is achieved for different emitters and excitation wavelengths, benefiting from the facile size control and isotropic shape of SiNSs. Simultaneous modulation of excitation and emission via a single SiNS at visible wavelengths significantly improves the efficiency and directionality of TMD exciton emission and leads to the potential of multifunctional integrated photonics. Overall, the work opens promising opportunities for nanophotonics and polaritonic systems, enabling efficient manipulation, enhancement, and reconfigurability of light-matter interactions.Entities:
Keywords: Mie resonances; directional excitation and emission; directional modulation; nanoemitters; silicon nanospheres; transition metal dichalcogenides
Year: 2021 PMID: 33837615 PMCID: PMC8211409 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202007236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849