Testbeds for Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Photonics: Efficacy of Light Emission Enhancement in Monomer vs. Dimer Nanoscale Antennae
Mohammad H. Tahersima, M. Danang Birowosuto, Zhizhen Ma, Ibrahim, Sarpkaya, William C. Coley, Michael D. Valentin, I-Hsi Lu, Ke Liu, Yao Zhou,, Aimee Martinez, Ingrid Liao, Brandon N. Davis, Joseph Martinez, Sahar Naghibi, Alvillar, Dominic Martinez-Ta, Alison Guan

TL;DR
This study compares monomer and dimer nanoscale antennae for enhancing photoluminescence in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides, finding that monomer antennae achieve comparable emission enhancement with less fabrication complexity.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that monomer antennae can match the emission enhancement of dimer antennae in 2D materials, reducing lithographic effort and providing new insights into emission mechanisms.
Findings
Monomer antennae achieve similar enhancement as dimer antennae.
Emission enhancement is an average effect from the effective cavity cross-section.
Both antenna types show approximately 3x higher emission than intrinsic WS2 flakes.
Abstract
Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides are uniquely-qualified materials for photonics because they combine well defined tunable direct band gaps and selfpassivated surfaces without dangling bonds. However, the atomic thickness of these 2D materials results in low photo absorption limiting the achievable photo luminescence intensity. Such emission can, in principle, be enhanced via nanoscale antennae resulting in; a. an increased absorption cross-section enhancing pump efficiency, b. an acceleration of the internal emission rate via the Purcell factor mainly by reducing the antennas optical mode volume beyond the diffraction limit, and c. improved impedance matching of the emitter dipole to the freespace wavelength. Plasmonic dimer antennae show orders of magnitude hot-spot field enhancements when an emitter is positioned exactly at the midgap. However, a 2D material cannot be grown,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPlasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · 2D Materials and Applications · Nanowire Synthesis and Applications
