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Experimental verification of photonic band-tail states and their use for shaping laser properties : 광자 띠꼬리 상태의 실험적 입증과 이에 기반한 레이저 특성의 제어

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dc.contributor.advisor전헌수-
dc.contributor.author이명재-
dc.date.accessioned2018-05-28T17:06:03Z-
dc.date.available2018-05-28T17:06:03Z-
dc.date.issued2018-02-
dc.identifier.other000000149678-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/141091-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 자연과학대학 물리·천문학부, 2018. 2. 전헌수.-
dc.description.abstractShaping light to generate desired optical properties is one of the important topics in optics and photonics that has been studied for a long time. A complete control over the light intensity, polarization, frequency, phase, and even the spatio-temporal distribution of electromagnetic fields is the long-sought primary objective of light shaping, which can be the base technology for applied science and industry that handles the shape of light, leading to advanced optical functionalities and next generation photonic devices.
The study of light shaping is considered to be the process of controlling the shape of light by manipulating the spatial and temporal optical properties of material, with understanding of electromagnetic properties of the medium in which light propagates. Historically, material properties of media have been a major methodology, which is represented by the dispersion relation on wavelength, birefringence on polarization, and nonlinearity. However, research on structural properties such as reflection, diffraction, and scattering at the interface, originated from the spatial arrangement of materials, is being actively carried out as well, consisting a large branch of modern photonics including photonic crystals, metamaterials, and topological photonics. The essence of studying light shaping is then to generate the structured light, using these material and structural methodologies, in order to improve an existing optical system and to develop new photonic devices.
Thus, within a finite material pool, the issues of shaping light eventually result in a problem of the spatio-temporal arrangement of materials. The structure based on the periodic arrangement is used in many fields due to the intuitive design, but this approach is difficult to apply to optical systems which require complexity, because of the limited structural parameters. On the other hand, an optically disordered system which randomly arranges materials without specific restrictions provides vast degrees of structural freedom that increase according to the system size, but consumes a large amount of resources in order to predict optical properties and to form desired light shapes. That is, the structural degree of freedom and the predictability are complementary.
In this thesis, a photonic crystal alloy is proposed as an ideal compromise that can easily predict and design optical properties while ensuring sufficient structural degrees of freedom to shape light with complexity corresponding to the real world. Here, the degree of freedom increases with the diversity of photonic atoms, however, the scattering strength at each lattice site can be controlled individually and independently to design the entire system in a pixelated scheme since the underlying crystalline structure is maintained.
The spectral characteristics are then investigated to reveal that the eigenmode of the proposed system is the photonic band-tail state existing in the photonic band-gap. For this state, it is experimentally confirmed that the energy range in which the states are distributed is determined by the crystalline structure and the scattering strength, and that the spatial near-field distribution varies in a wide range, including the weak and strong localization, depending on the energy of the mode and the scattering strength of the structure. These observations prove the localization of the photonic band-tail state, which was theoretically predicted in 1987. In addition, the modal properties of the photonic band-tail states are distributed in a wide spectro-spatial range across the complete band-gap and from only a few lattices to the entire structure, which is a great advantage for light shaping.
The band-tail laser, a conceptually novel laser device that uses the band-tail state as a resonant mode, is proposed, and the light shaping within a membrane is demonstrated by realizing the band-tail laser in a slab waveguide embedding InAsP/InP multiple-quantum-well structure. Using only the structural parameters of the photonic crystal alloy, monotonic control of modal density from multi-mode to single-mode, and precise manipulation of both the modal energy and modal extents of a single-mode operating band-tail laser are demonstrated. Furthermore, the near-field profile of a mode can be modulated in various shapes from the fundamental shape to high-order shapes including orbital angular momentum and spiral pattern.
The design of light shaping, based on structural degrees of freedom in the band tail laser, is far more intuitive and effective than any disordered system, and the range of controllable modal properties and demonstrated shaping capabilities are superior to any known laser platform. The performance of band tail lasers is also comparable to the modern cavity lasers. Therefore, the photonic band-tail state and the band-tail laser, proposed in this thesis as a light shaping platform, could incorporate the currently known small library of lasing platform and even expand its boundary by realizing elaborate light shaping with various near-field shapes, which contributes to the development of various fields that deal with the shape of light.
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dc.description.tableofcontents1. Introduction 1
1.1. Shaping light 1
1.1.1. Current status of light shaping 1
1.1.2. Shaping light within a membrane 2
1.1.3. Shaping light using periodic materials 4
1.1.4. Shaping light using scattering media 5
1.1.5. Summary 6
1.2. Photonic crystals 7
1.2.1. Theoretical proposal of E. Yablonovitch: Photonic analogy of semiconductor 7
1.2.2. Photonic band structure: Blochs theorem 8
1.2.3. Photonic band-gap: Inhibition of spontaneous emission 10
1.2.4. Photonic band-edges: Slow light effects 11
1.2.5. Shaping light using photonic crystals 11
1.2.6. Issues of photonic crystals approach: Insufficient parameters 13
1.2.7. Summary 14
1.3. Anderson localization 16
1.3.1. Theoretical proposals of P. W. Anderson: Localized eigenstates in a disordered lattice 16
1.3.2. Localization of a light: White paint theory 18
1.3.3. Pioneering experiments on photon localization 19
1.3.4. Shaping light using Anderson localization principle 22
1.3.5. Issues of Anderson localization approach: Controlling vast degrees of freedom 25
1.3.6. Summary 26
1.4. Objectives of this thesis 27
1.4.1. Development of an ideal platform for shaping a confined light 27
1.4.2. Characterization of eigenstates in the proposed platform 27
1.4.3. Demonstration of light shaping on chip-scale devices 28
1.4.4. Summary 28
1.5. Conclusion 29
2. Photonic crystal alloys 33
2.1. Introduction 33
2.1.1. Disordered photonic structures for light shaping 33
2.1.2. Previous studies on lattice disorder 35
2.1.3. Previous studies on compositional disorder 38
2.1.4. Major differences between the two systems 41
2.1.5. Summary 42
2.2. Photonic crystal alloys 43
2.2.1. Motivation: Preserving the crystalline symmetry 43
2.2.2. Quantification of the system 44
2.2.3. Fourier analysis: Ordered and disordered components 47
2.2.4. Summary 50
2.3. Optical activation 51
2.3.1. Motivation: Examining all eigenmodes in the system 51
2.3.2. Planar waveguide: Confining light within 2D slab structure 52
2.3.3. Multiple-quantum-well structure: Quantum confinement of charge carriers 53
2.3.4. Laser operation: Exclusive study of eigenstates 55
2.3.5. Summary 57
2.4. Experimental tools 58
2.4.1. Sample preparation 58
2.4.2. Photoluminescence measurement 60
2.4.3. Near-field measurement 63
2.4.4. Simulation method 69
2.4.5. Summary 70
2.5. Conclusion 71
3. Photonic band-tail states 75
3.1. Introduction 75
3.1.1. Theoretical predictions of S. John: Localized states inside the band-gap 75
3.1.2. Expected modal properties: Energy dependence of localization 76
3.1.3. Previous studies on photonic band-tail states 77
3.1.4. Prerequisites for photonic band-tail states 83
3.1.5. Summary 84
3.2. System of interest 85
3.2.1. Photonic crystal alloy with random configuration: Maintaining band properties 85
3.2.2. Hexagonal crystal structure: Wide band-gap 87
3.2.3. Slab waveguide embedding MQWs: Purcell enhancements of localized eigenstates 88
3.2.4. Summary 90
3.3. Photoluminescence characterization 91
3.3.1. Spectral response: Lasing modes developed inside band-gap 91
3.3.2. Statistical identification of photonic band-tail states 95
3.3.3. Band-gap narrowing: Explanation based on virtual crystal approximation 97
3.3.4. Exponentially increasing penetration depth 99
3.3.5. Gain overlap factor for lasing states 100
3.3.6. Bloch states vs. band-tail states 102
3.3.7. Lasing performance of band-tail states 104
3.3.8. Excitation dependence of modal energy 106
3.3.9. Summary 108
3.4. Near-field characterization 110
3.4.1. Eigenmode profiles: The most direct evidence of localization 110
3.4.2. Weak and strong localization 115
3.4.3. Quantification of modal extents 117
3.4.4. Localization of photonic band-tail states 118
3.4.5. Energy dependence of localization: Explanation based on envelope function of band-tail states 120
3.4.6. Mean free path and Ioffe-Regel factor 121
3.4.7. Eigenmode profiles of the other band-tail states 124
3.4.8. Eigenmode profiles in momentum space 125
3.4.9. Effective width in momentum space 129
3.4.10. Resolution dependence of Fourier space 131
3.4.11. Boundary dependence of modal extents 133
3.4.12. Excitation dependence of modal extents 134
3.4.13. Summary 137
3.5. Conclusion 140
4. Shaping band-tail lasers 145
4.1. Introduction 145
4.1.1. Random lasers: Laser in scattering media 145
4.1.2. Previous studies on shaping random laser 147
4.1.3. Recent approaches: Access to internal degree of freedom 151
4.1.4. Band-tail laser: Laser device based on band-tail states 153
4.1.5. Advantages for light shaping 154
4.1.6. Summary 155
4.2. Shaping modal densities 156
4.2.1. Main idea for shaping modal density: Controlling photonic density of states 156
4.2.2. Spectral response: The single-mode random laser 157
4.2.3. Near-field profiles: Elimination of peripheral modes 163
4.2.4. Lasing performances: Compared to state-of-the-art cavity lasers 165
4.2.5. Boundary dependence of modal properties 168
4.2.6. Dominant loss channel in a band-tail laser 170
4.2.7. Summary 172
4.3. Shaping modal properties 173
4.3.1. Main idea for shaping modal properties: Adjusting basis scattering elements 173
4.3.2. Spectral response: Wide and precise control of lasing modes 175
4.3.3. Degree of freedom in 2D parameter space: Exclusive modal control on both energy and confinement 178
4.3.4. Computational evidences of measured results 181
4.3.5. Computational evidences for the generality 183
4.3.6. Summary 185
4.4. Shaping near-field profiles 186
4.4.1. Main idea for shaping near-field profiles: Engineering a configuration to place scatterers 186
4.4.2. C6symmetric configuration for symmetric profiles 187
4.4.3. Spectro-spatial response: Rough tuning with configuration 188
4.4.4. Near-field shaping: From fundamental to high-order shapes 190
4.4.5. Orbital angular momentum and spiral pattern of confined light 193
4.4.6. Summary 195
4.5. Conclusion 197
5. Conclusion and outlook 201
References 205
국문 초록 217
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent9691471 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectShaping light-
dc.subjectStructured light-
dc.subjectNear-field shaping-
dc.subjectLight localization-
dc.subjectPhotonic band-tail states-
dc.subjectBand-tail lasers-
dc.subjectPhotonic crystal alloys-
dc.subjectRandom lasers-
dc.subject.ddc523.01-
dc.titleExperimental verification of photonic band-tail states and their use for shaping laser properties-
dc.title.alternative광자 띠꼬리 상태의 실험적 입증과 이에 기반한 레이저 특성의 제어-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorMyungjae Lee-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.contributor.affiliation자연과학대학 물리·천문학부-
dc.date.awarded2018-02-
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