Nurmikko , Arto
Transcription
Nurmikko , Arto
Nanophotonics – so what, and for what? Arto V. Nurmikko* Brown University my own lesson in life: new technologies are unpredictable vs. long term impact ZnSe green-blue cw QW diode laser Jeon et al (1993) Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Major Photonics Application/Technologies Focus on “active devices” (vs. passive ‘optical wires’): IC Lithography Etc. Displays Optical telecom Optical storage Photovoltaics 0.2 • • • • 0.6 1 λ(µm) mostly single crystal epitaxy e.g. highest diode laser efficiency >70% (VCSEL) e.g. multijunction tandem PV cell ~40% (Spectrolab), and poly-Si e.g. white light inorganic and organic LEDs Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Nanophotonic Devices – Is smaller better ? • smaller is better only if it is a lot better (performance, cost, application) • otherwise (and additionally) need and explore novel application spaces ‘few photon’ (single photon) coherent sources Decreasing source size FP/DFB lasers/VCSELs/RCLEDs ~λ Photonic Crystal LEDs and diode lasers <λ 1) Require creative fabrication strategies for: (i) Nanomaterial/composite assembly (ii) Electrical access/junctions (iii) nano-macroscale bridge for process flow (compatibility issues) 2) Look for enhanced light-matter coupling Nanophotonic regime at least 2-dimensions of (individual) elements are <<λ Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Top-Down or/and Bottom-Up Fabrication 1 nm 10 nm 100nm High resolution lithography (ebeam) Direct nanomaterials synthesis epitaxy vs. colloidal QDs 1000nm 1x1 µm2 GaN QDs Challenge: assembly, contacts InGaN QWs Challenge: size limit/expensive Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Possible Elements of a New Toolkit e.g. for a “few photon” or single photon source 1) Enhanced Light Matter Interaction - semiconductor microcavities vs. atom microcavity physics - near field (dipole-dipole) collective interaction 2) Efficient internal energy transfer on ‘nanoscale’ (Forster = dipole/dipole) e.g. from pump or for multiple-element chromophores 3) For coherent sources (including single photon emitter), need strong local feedback on sub-λ scale Nanocomposite active optical material Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Possible Elements of a New Toolkit “Piecewise Material Examples”: QD/J-aggregate J-aggregate/ microcavity InGaN nanopost Arrays Strong LightMatter Coupling Efficient Internal E-transfer “Local Feedback” (resonatorless) Electrical Injection Plasmonic particles in gain medium InGaN/organic junction • Interfaces and interactions: excitation vs. charge transfer • Inorganic, organic, and noble metal nanomaterials Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Cartoon Approach to Design What is this ? Nano-optical antenna Contact layer Nano AND macroscale contacts Photoelectronic conversion; charge and excitation transport Nano composite layer Contact layer Flexible substrate Need a spatially organized, optically high density, electronically “flexible”, and low loss electrically accessible nanomedium (for emitters and possibly PV) Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice 1) Basic Semiconductor Microcavity Physics ca. 1994-2005 e.g. organic semiconductor microcavity (~4 monolayers) e.g. ZnCdSe QW microcavity Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Strong Light-Matter Coupling Regime in Semiconductors: Single Exciton (atom) regime and QED Reality Check: Light-matter coupling strength: ΩR = µEvac/ħ = (πe2f)1/2 / (4πεmoVm)1/2 Cavity modal volume: n2εo|Evac|2 Vm = hν/2 Strong coupling criteria: g2 > (γc- γx)2 /16 Possible to achieve ħΩR > kT near temperature for a nanostructured Semiconductor-based structure for single-photon regime Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Device Example : Single Photon Emitter (a) Single organic molecule in single mode 3D microcavity (b) Single InAs quantum dot in 3D microcavity (2004) “random” e.g. J-aggregate Lcoh ~ 100 nm (RT) Reichtmaier et al (2004) Yoshie et al (2004) Arakawa et al • a special “zero-threshold” laser • single exciton “molecule” (“two-level atom) within 3D confined optical field: analog to single-atom-in-microcavity (!) • fJ-aggr ~ 10 – 100 fQD Æ room temp operation in strong coupling regime • QED and ‘special’ photon statistics for quantum information processing Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Prelude: J-aggregate Organic in a Microcavity • Organic semiconductors and organic/inorganic hybrids/nanocomposites • Microcavity effects to enhance light-matter interaction: Exciton-Polariton 0.25 Absorbance (αL) J-Aggregate J-band 694nm Monomer 0.20 Cyanine dye/PVA-J aggregate 0.15 monomer (solution) FWHM = 20nm 0.10 “extended Frenkel” e.g. J-aggregate (vs.monomer): • giant exciton oscillator strength • fast relaxation time • imbed in inorganic microcavity • recently: layer-by-layer deposition α > 106 cm-1 (Bradley et al 2006) 0.05 0.00 400 450 500 550 600 650 700 750 800 Wavelength (nm) Room Temperature absorbance Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Extraordinarily dense Potential optical Gain medium An Organic Exciton-Polariton Microcavity optical pumping: e.g. Lidzay et al • λ/2 microcavity • Normal mode (Rabi) splitting ~ 200 meV >> kT Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice J. Tischler at al, PRL (2005) Exciton-Polariton Organic Microcavity LED • implementation with metallic reflectors • emission from lower polariton band • possibilities for a polariton laser ? J. Tischler PRL (2005) (A) (B) Energy (eV) 3 2.7 2.4 2.1 3 2.7 2.4 2.1 1.8 70 UB LB 50 40 30 20 10 500 600 700 Wavelength (nm) 1.8 1.0 PL 0.9 0.8 0.9 0.8 Abs 0.7 0.6 UB 0.5 LB 0.4 0.3 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 LB UB 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.0 400 Energy (eV) 3 2.7 2.4 2.1 EL Intensity (a.u.) 80 Absorbance, PL Intensity (a.u.) 90 (%) Reflectivity 1.8 1.0 100 60 (C) Energy (eV) 0.0 400 500 600 700 Wavelength (nm) Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice 400 500 600 700 Wavelength (nm) Current efforts: J-aggregates as superhigh gain medium • employ layer-by-layer synthesis • measure coherence area by fsec 4-wave mixing spe’cy • aim at a 2D “crystal” of 100 nm coherence area: giant dipole for a single photon emitter Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice 2) Examples of Interactions and Interfaces Organic/inorganic semiconductors and metal nanoparticles: Energy transfer: Charge transfer: • InGaN nanopost arrays • InGaN/organic heterojunction • J-aggregate-QD transfer • Plasmon focusing Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice B850nm B800nm e.g. variable D-A length Eg. Rhodopsoremnas acidophilia: • a truly multichromophore system: beyond Förster theory • very high local chromophore density Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice (a) Multichromophore, High Density Nanoparticle “Artificial” Composite Material Systems ? InGaN nanoposts/ODs i) Simple Forster (inelastic photon tunneling): organic medium KR ~ (n-4)(Ro/R)6 ii) Multichromophore enhancements: P Photons P ~10-50 nm • multiple length scales over which D-A centers interact • degenerate multiexciton systems (‘vanishing Stoke shifts’) • quantum mechanical coherence and collective effects Silbey, PRL 2004, Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Dicke: superradiance InGaN Nanorod Mesoscopic Active (Optical Gain) Media Yiping He (2004-2005) e.g. 10 InGaN QWs ~ 40-60nm pillar diameter ~ <50 nm edged-to-edge separation 360 380 400 420 440 Wavelength (nm) • high resolution ebeam litho, etching • high spontaneous emission efficiency: low surface state recombination • stimulated emission at very low threshold • physics: photon localization vs. dipoledipole interaction (nanoscale resonators) Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice AlGaN 200nm InGaN MQW Active medium sapphire substrate GaN buffer layer ~2µm Enhanced Photon-Exciton Coupling in High Density Nanorod Arrays (1) Evidence for enhanced photon-electron interaction on ~1 um scale: • • Photon scattering (localization/effective mean free path) Near-field electrodynamics (dipole-dipole interaction: multichromophore) (2) Nonideality factors from surface roughness and fabrication imperfections: a form of inhomogeneous broadening very strong coupling/short photon mean free path in a high fosc medium Prior work in “random lasers”: a) Molecular dyes in “ground glass” (e.g. Lawandy et al, 1995) b) Random ZnO nanocystallites in dielectric host (Cao et al, 2000) Photon diffusion length < 100 nm Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice (b) Energy Transfer from Colloidal QDs to J-aggregate Colloidal QD as the “pump” QD in silica spheres, Organic ‘cladding’ Absorbance Spectrum 0.6 TTBC J-agg 0.5 Abs CdSe/ZnS QD emission: 565nm J-aggregate emission: 580nm 0.7 0.4 0.3 QD & TTBC 0.2 Optical pumping: 0.1 0.0 400 • QD emission was significantly quenched • The presence of QDs may interfere with formation of Jaggregates 450 100 500 550 600 650 700 Wavelength (nm) PL Spectrum Ex@380nm QD565 div by 5 80 Intensity (a.u.) • TTBC J-agg emission was redshifted and greatly enhanced QD565 60 QD & TTBC 40 20 TTBC J-agg 0 500 Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice 550 600 Wavelength (nm) 650 (Zhang 2006) Forster Energy Transfer from QDs to J-aggregate 1.2 300 Absorbance Spectrum 1.0 250 Abs 0.8 Intensity (a.u.) QD & TTBC TTBC J-agg 0.6 0.4 0.2 QD655 200 150 TTBC J-agg 100 QD655 0 400 450 500 550 600 650 700 550 Wavelength (nm) PLE Spectrum Em@653nm 300 200 1-T 0.6 0.4 QD655 0.2 0 450 500 700 0.8 QD & TTBC 400 650 QD emission: 655nm J-aggregate emission: 580nm 1.0 100 600 Wavelength (nm) 500 Intensity (a.u.) QD & TTBC 50 0.0 400 PL Spectrum Ex@530nm 550 600 Wavelength (nm) Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice • QD emission was greatly enhanced when the excitation wavelength is in the neighborhood of TTBC absorption. • Monomers and dimers seems to couple better to QDs than J-aggregate • J-aggregate emission was still redshifted (c) Metal Nanoparticles (resonant plasmons) to enhance efficiency local field/feedback on sub-λ scale? • “Plasmonics”: giant optical antenna effects on sub-λ size scale – means to couple, guide, and concentrate optical field – also for providing interconnects to nanorods/nanocrystals • Metal nanoparticle-enhanced semiconductor quantum dot emission ? – Plasmon Extinction = Absorption + Scattering photons-in QD “cast a giant Shadow” Enhancement Quenching photons-out M “absorptive” Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice QD photons-in M “scattering” Concentration/Scattering of Light on Nanoscale (<<λ) 0nm “cast a giant shadow” E 20nm 80nm NSOM image SEM image (Atay et al, Nanolett 2005) 100 nm 100 nm after ultrashort pulse laser irradiation (at ωp) • tailoring the surface plasmon resonance by adjacent nanoparticle interaction • optical field local concentration 10-100 fold at touching point(estimate) • colloidal QDs added (so far) for resonant energy transfer/interaction Nanoscale Energy in Conversion – Sept 2006, • immerse optical Workshop gain medium: giantNice scattering cross section (low loss) (Lawandy) (c) Nanocomposite II-VI QD-Ag Structures Colloidal II-VI and InGaN nanocrystals Patterned area (100 μm × 100 μm ) PMMA 200~400nm 50nm QDs 30nm Excitation • SEM image after developing (pattern #4) • Most QDs within SPP field • Localized + propagating SPP PL • Samples: Diameter – lattice constant #1: 100nm – 200nm #2: 100nm – 260nm #3: 140nm – 300nm #4: 160nm – 300nm Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice J.H. Song, Nanolett (2005) (d) Hexagonal Dense Array of Colloidal II-VI QDs Before J-aggregate cladding: closely packed Silica sphere Q. Zhang (2006) Centered CdSe/ZnS QD Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Spatial control of QD or nanorod placement Colloidal particles Single (coated) QDs in nanofabricated 100 nm “wells” Conductive back electrode CdSe/ZnS QD/silica captured in well • Self-assembling of colloidal QDs onto electron-beam lithography patterned PMMA template (by capillary and other driving force). • aim at single photon statistics (photon antibunching) under optical pumping Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice Summary: Can we really make something like this? Nano AND macroscale contacts Nano-optical antenna Contact layer Photoelectronic conversion; charge and excitation transport Nano composite layer Contact layer Flexible substrate Acknowledgements: V. Bulovic, J. Tischler, S. Bradley (MIT) Jung Han (Yale) T. Atay, Q. Zhang, Y. He, Y.-K. Song, R. Zia (Brown) Nanoscale Energy Conversion Workshop – Sept 2006, Nice