Phys. Rev. B 79, 161303(R) (2009) [4 pages]Disorder-induced resonance shifts in high-index-contrast photonic crystal nanocavities
An optical scattering theory is introduced that predicts significant disorder-induced resonance shifts for photonic crystal nanocavities. These counterintuitive modal frequency shifts stem from the subtle role of local electric fields at perturbed (disordered) high-index-contrast interfaces. Using a representative cavity with a quality factor of 40 000 and an effective mode volume of 0.07 μm3, the cavity mode frequency is found to blueshift by up to several meV—even for nanometer-scale imperfections at the dielectric interface—which is several orders of magnitude larger than the cavity linewidth. These disorder-induced resonance shifts apply to a wide range of fabricated photonic nanostructures and scale approximately with the inverse mode volume. © 2009 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.79.161303
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.79.161303
PACS:
42.70.Qs, 41.20.Jb, 42.25.Fx, 42.65.−k
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