Directional coupling of emitters into waveguides: A symmetry perspective
Aristeidis G. Lamprianidis, Xavier Zambrana-Puyalto, Carsten, Rockstuhl, and Ivan Fernandez-Corbaton

TL;DR
This paper explains the mechanisms behind directional light coupling into waveguides, highlighting the role of symmetry breaking and angular momentum, and proposes an experiment to enhance quantum dot emission directionality.
Contribution
It provides a symmetry-based analysis of directional coupling, revealing how transverse angular momentum influences directionality and proposing a new experimental approach.
Findings
Directionality is mainly due to mirror symmetry breaking caused by transverse angular momentum.
Exponential growth of directionality with increasing transverse angular momentum.
A proposed experiment with transverse magnetic bias to enhance quantum dot emission directionality.
Abstract
Recent experiments demonstrated strongly directional coupling of light into waveguide modes. We identify here the mechanisms behind this effect. We consider emitters near a waveguide, either centered on the median plane of the waveguide, or displaced from such plane. We show that, independently of the displacement, the directionality is mostly due to a mirror symmetry breaking caused by the axial character of the angular momentum of the emitted light. The sign of the angular momentum along an axis transverse to the waveguide determines the preferential coupling direction. The degree of directionality grows exponentially as the magnitude of such transverse angular momentum increases linearly. We trace this exponential dependence back to a property of the evanescent angular spectrum of the emissions. A binary and less pronounced directional coupling effect due to the chiral character of…
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