On-chip Light Trapping in Bilayer Moir\'e Photonic Crystal Slabs
Haoning Tang, Xueqi Ni, Fan Du, Eric Mazur

TL;DR
This paper explores how bilayer moire photonic crystal slabs can achieve flat-band conditions, enabling zero group velocity modes that enhance light trapping, with potential applications in quantum photonics and low-threshold lasers.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of optical moire patterns in bilayer photonic crystals to realize flat-band conditions for enhanced light trapping and emission control.
Findings
Achieved zero group velocity modes in bilayer moire photonic crystals.
Demonstrated high-Q, small modal volume light trapping.
Enabled manipulation of spontaneous emission via moire pattern design.
Abstract
There has been remarkable recent progress in the formation of nano-resonators that support ultra-low-loss, compact dielectric photonic crystals with exceptional high-Q modes that operate at visible or telecom wavelengths. New insights into modal engineering have recently emerged from researchers exploring exotic electronic phases in 2D materials. The phenomenon relates to a twist in the angle between two layers of materials with high periodic spatial ordering, such as graphene. A moire pattern forms, and at a particular magic angle of twist, the electronic behavior significantly changes, enjoying a flat energy-momentum dispersion relationship. There is an optical analog to the electron twistronics: bilayer moire photonic crystal slabs can realize a flat-band condition. Under these conditions, the propagating modes have zero group velocity, thus giving rise to momentum-free trapping of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic Crystals and Applications · Photonic and Optical Devices · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research
