研究目的
Investigation of spontaneous emission dynamics of dye molecules coupled into transverse Anderson localized cavities in a hyperbolic waveguide.
研究成果
The study demonstrates that hyperbolic waveguides can support single, double, and multimode transverse Anderson localizations, significantly enhancing the spontaneous emission rate of dye molecules by up to a factor of 6.7. This suggests potential applications in quantum information technologies and photonic devices.
研究不足
The study is limited by the spectral and spatial mismatches between the randomly formed transverse Anderson localized modes and the uniformly distributed dye molecules, which may reduce the enhancement factor of the spontaneous emission rate.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
The study involves time-resolved experiments to investigate the spontaneous emission dynamics of rhodamine 6G molecules coupled into transverse Anderson localized modes in hyperbolic waveguides.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Four hyperbolic waveguides are formed inside a deltoid-shaped fused-silica microtube via the capillary effect, filled with a rhodamine-doped polymeric material with randomly distributed air inclusions.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Equipment includes a high power pulsed laser, microscope objective, photo-spectrometer, time-resolved spectroscopy setup with a picosecond pulsed diode laser, and a single photon avalanche detector.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
The waveguides are excited to observe localized modes via photoluminescence spectrum, followed by time-resolved measurements to analyze spontaneous emission rates.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
Fluorescence lifetimes are analyzed using exponential decay fits, and the spontaneous emission rate enhancement is calculated.
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