Litcius/Paper detail

Topological nanophotonics for photoluminescence control

Aditya Tripathi, Sergey Kruk, Yunfei Shang, Jiajia Zhou, Ivan Kravchenko, Dayong Jin, Yuri Kivshar

2020Nanophotonics18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Rare‐earth‐doped nanocrystals are emerging light sources that can produce tunable emissions in colours and lifetimes, which has been typically achieved in chemistry and material science. However, one important optical challenge – polarization of photoluminescence – remains largely out of control by chemistry methods. Control over photoluminescence polarization can be gained via coupling of emitters to resonant nanostructures such as optical antennas and metasurfaces. However, the resulting polarization is typically sensitive to position disorder of emitters, which is difficult to mitigate. Methods Recently, new classes of disorder‐immune optical systems have been explored within the framework of topological photonics. Here we explore disorder‐robust topological arrays of Mie‐resonant nanoparticles for polarization control of photoluminescence of nanocrystals. Results We demonstrate polarized emission from rare‐earth‐doped nanocrystals governed by photonic topological edge states supported by zigzag arrays of dielectric resonators. We verify the topological origin of polarized photoluminescence by comparing emission from nanoparticles coupled to topologically trivial and nontrivial arrays of nanoresonators. Conclusions We expect that our results may open a new direction in the study of topology‐enable emission properties of topological edge states in many photonic systems.

Topics & Concepts

PhotoluminescenceNanophotonicsPhotonicsPolarization (electrochemistry)Topology (electrical circuits)Materials scienceNanomaterialsZigzagDielectricOptoelectronicsNanoparticleNanotechnologyCircular polarizationNanostructurePhotonic crystalLight emissionPhysicsNanocrystalSpontaneous emissionExcitonCoupling (piping)Metamaterials and Metasurfaces ApplicationsPlasmonic and Surface Plasmon ResearchPhotonic Crystals and Applications