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Pulse capture without carrier absorption in dynamic Q photonic crystal nanocavities
Author(s) -
Jeremy Upham,
Hiroki Inoue,
Yoshinori Tanaka,
Wolfgang Stumpf,
Kazunobu Kojima,
Takashi Asano,
Susumu Noda
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.22.015459
Subject(s) - optoelectronics , materials science , photoexcitation , photonic crystal , absorption (acoustics) , gallium arsenide , optics , nanosecond , carrier lifetime , nanophotonics , photonics , silicon , laser , physics , atomic physics , excited state , composite material
We develop a gallium arsenide (GaAs) photonic crystal nanocavity device capable of capturing and releasing a pulse of light by dynamic control of the Q factor through free carrier photoexcitation. Unlike silicon-based devices where the performance of this dynamic optical control is limited by absorption from free carriers with nanosecond-order lifetimes, the short carrier lifetime (∼ 7 ps) of our equivalent GaAs devices enables dynamic control with negligible absorption losses. We capture a 4 ps optical pulse by briefly cycling the Q factor from 40,000 to 7900 and back just as the light couples to the nanocavity and confirm that the captured energy can be subsequently released on demand by a second injection of free carriers. Demonstrating dynamic control with negligible loss in a GaAs nanophotonic device also opens the door to dynamic control of cavity quantum electrodynamics with potential application towards quantum information processing.

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