Engineering the Spectral and Spatial Dispersion of Thermal Emission via Polariton–Phonon Strong Coupling
Author(s) -
Guanyu Lu,
Christopher R. Gubbin,
J. Ryan Nolen,
Thomas G. Folland,
Marko J. Tadjer,
Simone De Liberato,
Joshua D. Caldwell
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c04767
Subject(s) - polariton , nanophotonics , phonon , surface phonon , polarization (electrochemistry) , materials science , optoelectronics , coupling (piping) , dispersion relation , common emitter , nanopillar , condensed matter physics , surface plasmon polariton , physics , optics , surface plasmon , plasmon , nanotechnology , nanostructure , chemistry , metallurgy
Strong coupling between optical modes can be implemented into nanophotonic design to modify the energy-momentum dispersion relation. This approach offers potential avenues for tuning the thermal emission frequency, line width, polarization, and spatial coherence. Here, we employ three-mode strong coupling between propagating and localized surface phonon polaritons, with zone-folded longitudinal optic phonons within periodic arrays of 4H-SiC nanopillars. Energy exchange, mode evolution, and coupling strength between the three polariton branches are explored experimentally and theoretically. The influence of strong coupling upon the angle-dependent thermal emission was directly measured, providing excellent agreement with theory. We demonstrate a 5-fold improvement in the spatial coherence and 3-fold enhancement of the quality factor of the polaritonic modes, with these hybrid modes also exhibiting a mixed character that could enable opportunities to realize electrically driven emission. Our results show that polariton-phonon strong coupling enables thermal emitters, which meet the requirements for a host of IR applications in a simple, lightweight, narrow-band, and yet bright emitter.
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