Cavity-free plasmonic nanolasing enabled by dispersionless stopped light
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2014 papers
Abstract
When light is brought to a standstill, its interaction with gain media increases dramatically due to a singularity in the density of optical states. Concurrently, stopped light engenders an inherent and cavity-free feedback mechanism, similar in effect to the feedback that has been demonstrated and exploited in large-scale disordered media and random lasers. Here we study the spatial, temporal and spectral signatures of lasing in planar gain-enhanced nanoplasmonic structures at near-infrared frequencies and show that the stopped-light feedback mechanism allows for nanolasing without a cavity. We reveal that in the absence of cavity-induced feedback, the subwavelength lasing mode forms dynamically as a phase-locked superposition of quasi dispersion-free waveguide modes. This mechanism proves remarkably robust against interface roughness and offers a new route towards nanolasing, the experimental realization of ultra-thin surface emitting lasers, and cavity-free active quantum plasmonics.
Related Papers
- → Whispering gallery-mode lasing in ZnO microrods at room temperature(2009)110 cited
- → Random Lasing Action from Randomly Assembled ZnS Nanosheets(2010)23 cited
- → Toward single-mode random lasing within a submicrometre-sized spherical ZnO particle film(2016)20 cited
- → Lasing and Anti-Lasing in a Single Cavity(2017)20 cited
- → Effect of Pump Area on Lasing Modes in Active Random Media(2005)1 cited