TY - JOUR
T1 - Formation of Lead Halide Perovskite Based Plasmonic Nanolasers and Nanolaser Arrays by Tailoring the Substrate
AU - Huang, Can
AU - Sun, Wenzhao
AU - Fan, Yubin
AU - Wang, Yujie
AU - Gao, Yisheng
AU - Zhang, Nan
AU - Wang, Kaiyang
AU - Liu, Shuai
AU - Wang, Shuai
AU - Xiao, Shumin
AU - Song, Qinghai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/4/24
Y1 - 2018/4/24
N2 - Hybrid plasmonic nanolasers are intensively studied due to their nanoscale mode confinement and potentials in highly integrated photonic and quantum devices. Until now, the characteristics of plasmonic nanolasers are mostly determined by the crystal facets of top semiconductors, such as ZnO nanowires or nanoplates. As a result, the spasers are isolated, and their lasing wavelengths are random and difficult to tune. Herein, we experimentally demonstrate the formation of lead halide perovskite (MAPbX3) based hybrid plasmonic nanolasers and nanolaser arrays with arbitrary cavity shapes and controllable lasing wavelengths. These spasers are composed of MAPbX3 perovskite nanosheets, which are separated from Au patterns with a 10 nm SiO2 spacer. In contrast to previous reports, here, the spasers are determined by the boundary of Au patterns instead of the crystal facets of MAPbX3 nanosheets. As a result, whispering gallery mode based circular spasers and spaser arrays were successfully realized by patterning the Au substrate into circles and gratings, respectively. The standard wavelength deviation of spaser arrays is as small as 0.3 nm. Meanwhile, owing to the anion-exchangeable property of MAPbX3 perovskite, the emission wavelengths of spasers were tuned more than 100 nm back and forth by changing the stoichiometry of perovskite postsynthetically.
AB - Hybrid plasmonic nanolasers are intensively studied due to their nanoscale mode confinement and potentials in highly integrated photonic and quantum devices. Until now, the characteristics of plasmonic nanolasers are mostly determined by the crystal facets of top semiconductors, such as ZnO nanowires or nanoplates. As a result, the spasers are isolated, and their lasing wavelengths are random and difficult to tune. Herein, we experimentally demonstrate the formation of lead halide perovskite (MAPbX3) based hybrid plasmonic nanolasers and nanolaser arrays with arbitrary cavity shapes and controllable lasing wavelengths. These spasers are composed of MAPbX3 perovskite nanosheets, which are separated from Au patterns with a 10 nm SiO2 spacer. In contrast to previous reports, here, the spasers are determined by the boundary of Au patterns instead of the crystal facets of MAPbX3 nanosheets. As a result, whispering gallery mode based circular spasers and spaser arrays were successfully realized by patterning the Au substrate into circles and gratings, respectively. The standard wavelength deviation of spaser arrays is as small as 0.3 nm. Meanwhile, owing to the anion-exchangeable property of MAPbX3 perovskite, the emission wavelengths of spasers were tuned more than 100 nm back and forth by changing the stoichiometry of perovskite postsynthetically.
KW - hybrid plasmonic waveguide
KW - lead halide perovskite
KW - nanolaser array
KW - spaser
KW - wavelength control
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85045949920
U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.8b01206
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.8b01206
M3 - 文章
C2 - 29641176
AN - SCOPUS:85045949920
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 12
SP - 3865
EP - 3874
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 4
ER -