
The substantial and unstable dark current in metal halide perovskite photodetectors hampers their continued advancement. To address this issue, an innovative architecture has been proposed to effectively overcome the challenge of dark current in perovskite photoconductor-type devices, resulting in an almost negligible dark current and an exceptionally low dark current drift.
.- Publication Date: May. 17, 2024
- Vol. 6, Issue 3, 030501 (2024)
- Publication Date: Jun. 12, 2024
- Vol. 6, Issue 3, 030502 (2024)
- Publication Date: Jun. 26, 2024
- Vol. 6, Issue 3, 030503 (2024)
- Publication Date: May. 20, 2024
- Vol. 6, Issue 3, 034001 (2024)
Lanthanide-based microlasers have attracted considerable attention owing to their large anti-Stokes shifts, multiple emission bands, and narrow linewidths. Various applications of microlasers, such as optical communication, optical storage, and polarization imaging, require selecting the appropriate laser polarization mode and remote control of the laser properties. Here, we propose a unique plasmon-assisted method for the mode selection and remote control of microlasing using a lanthanide-based microcavity coupled with surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) that propagate on a silver microplate. With this method, the transverse electrical (TE) mode of microlasers can be easily separated from the transverse magnetic (TM) mode. Because the SPPs excited on the silver microplate only support TM mode propagation, the reserved TE mode is resonance-enhanced in the microcavity and amplified by the local electromagnetic field. Meanwhile, lasing-mode splitting can be observed under the near-field excitation of SPPs due to the coherent coupling between the microcavity and mirror microcavity modes. Benefiting from the long-distance propagation characteristics of tens of micrometers of SPPs on a silver microplate, remote excitation and control of upconversion microlasing can also be realized. These plasmon-assisted polarization mode-optional and remote-controllable upconversion microlasers have promising prospects in on-chip optoelectronic devices, encrypted optical information transmission, and high-precision sensors.
.- Publication Date: May. 08, 2024
- Vol. 6, Issue 3, 035001 (2024)
- Publication Date: Apr. 03, 2024
- Vol. 6, Issue 3, 036001 (2024)
Recognized in the 1990s, vortex beams’ ability to carry orbital angular momentum (OAM) has significantly contributed to applications in optical manipulation and high-dimensional classical and quantum information communication. However, inherent diffraction in free space results in the inevitable expansion of beam size and divergence contingent upon the OAM, limiting vortex beams’ applicability in areas such as spatial mode multiplexing communication, fiber-optic data transmission, and particle manipulation. These domains necessitate vortex beams with OAM-independent propagation characteristics. We introduce iso-propagation vortices (IPVs), vortex beams characterized by OAM-independent propagation behavior, achieved through precise radial index configuration of Laguerre–Gaussian beams. IPVs display notable transmission dynamics, including a reduced quality factor, resilience post-damage, and decreased and uniform modal scattering under atmospheric turbulence. Their distinctive attributes render IPVs valuable for potential applications in imaging, microscopy, optical communication, metrology, quantum information processing, and light–matter interactions. Notably, within optical communication, the case study suggests that the IPV basis, due to its OAM-independent propagation behavior, provides access to a more extensive spectrum of data channels compared with conventional spatial multiplexing techniques, consequently augmenting information capacity.
.- Publication Date: May. 17, 2024
- Vol. 6, Issue 3, 036002 (2024)
Harnessing the frequency dimension in integrated photonics offers key advantages in terms of scalability, noise resilience, parallelization, and compatibility with telecom multiplexing techniques. Integrated ring resonators have been used to generate frequency-entangled states through spontaneous four-wave mixing. However, state-of-the-art integrated resonators are limited by trade-offs among size, spectral separation, and efficient photon pair generation. We have developed silicon ring resonators with a footprint below 0.05 mm2 providing more than 70 frequency channels separated by 21 GHz. We exploit the narrow frequency separation to parallelize and independently control 34 single qubit-gates with a single set of three off-the-shelf electro-optic devices. We fully characterize 17 frequency-bin maximally entangled qubit pairs by performing quantum state tomography. We demonstrate for the first time, we believe, a fully connected five-user quantum network in the frequency domain. These results are a step towards a generation of quantum circuits implemented with scalable silicon photonics technology, for applications in quantum computing and secure communications.
.- Publication Date: Jun. 28, 2024
- Vol. 6, Issue 3, 036003 (2024)
About the Cover
Featured on the cover is a schematic of an OAM-multiplexing-based free-space optical communication system utilizing iso-propagation vortex beams with OAM-independent propagation dynamics. This new type of vortex beam overcomes historical limitations related to OAM-dependent divergence, thereby enhancing capacity and demonstrating resilience to atmospheric turbulence.