Electrical control of spontaneous emission and strong coupling for a single quantum dot
A. Laucht (1), F. Hofbauer (1), N. Hauke (1), J. Angele (1), S. Stobbe, (2), M. Kaniber (1), G. B\"ohm (1), P. Lodahl (2), M.-C. Amann (1), J. J., Finley (1) ((1) Walter Schottky Institut, Technische Universit\"at M\"unchen,, Germany, (2) DTU Fotonik

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates electrically tunable single quantum dot-photonic crystal nanocavities, enabling reversible control of light-matter interaction regimes and paving the way for integrated quantum photonic devices.
Contribution
It introduces a method to electrically control quantum dot-cavity coupling via the quantum confined Stark effect, achieving reversible tuning and strong coupling at the single-photon level.
Findings
Quantum confined Stark effect enables reversible tuning of dot-cavity coupling.
Vacuum Rabi splittings up to 0.13 meV observed, larger than linewidths.
Electrical control of spontaneous emission rates and zero-dimensional polaritons demonstrated.
Abstract
We report the design, fabrication and optical investigation of electrically tunable single quantum dot - photonic crystal defect nanocavities operating in both the weak and strong coupling regimes of the light matter interaction. Unlike previous studies where the dot-cavity spectral detuning was varied by changing the lattice temperature, or by the adsorption of inert-gases at low temperatures, we demonstrate that the quantum confined Stark effect can be employed to quickly and reversibly switch the dot-cavity coupling simply by varying a gate voltage. Our results show that exciton transitions from individual dots can be tuned by ~4 meV relative to the nanocavity mode before the emission quenches due to carrier tunneling escape. This range is much larger than the typical linewidth of the high-Q cavity modes (~0.10 meV) allowing us to explore and contrast regimes where the dots couple to…
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