Enhancement of two photon processes in quantum dots embedded in subwavelength metallic gratings

We show a large enhancement of two-photon absorption processes in nanocrystal quantum dots and of light upconversion efficiency from the IR to the near-IR spectral regime, using a hybrid optical device in which near-IR emitting InAs quantum dots were embedded on top a metallic nanoslit array. The resonant enhancement of these nonlinear optical processes is due to the strong local electromagnetic field enhancements inside the nanoslit array structure at the extraordinary transmission resonances. A maximal two-photon absorption enhancement of more than 20 was inferred. Different high field regions were identified for different polarizations, which can be used for designing and optimizing efficient nonlinear processes in such hybrid structures. Combining nanocrystal quantum dots with subwavelength metallic nanostructures is therfore a promising way for a range of possible nonlinear optical devices.


I. INTRODUCTION
Nanocrystal Quantum Dots (NQDs) are becoming increasingly important as the active building blocks for a host of photonic applications. This is due to their unique properties, such as their well engineered optical emission and absorption wavelengths, their high quantum yield and their tiny dimensions. These properties, together with the ability to selectively integrate them on various platforms down to the nanoscale by changing their chemical functionality, make them a suitable active medium for many nano-optical devices.
For improving and expanding the range of possible optical functionalities of NQDs in optical devices, control and manipulation schemes of their optical properties are necessary.
Indeed, a demonstration of control of quantum dots linear emission and absorption has been demonstrated in various works [13][14][15][16]. Some of the most interesting possible applications of NQDs in optical devices involve exploiting their optical nonlinear properties [17][18][19].
For efficient nonlinear optical processes involving NQDs, an enhancement of their nonlinear response is essential. In this regard, several works have demonstrated enhancement of two-photon absorption (TPA) processes of quantum dots using local field enhancements in dielectric photonic crystals [20,21]. Such ability to combine NQDs on the ensemble level as well as on the single particle level into photonic structures, and utilize it for manipulating the light -quantum dot interactions, opens up ways to construct various types of active optical devices, both linear and nonlinear, in subwavelengths dimensions and with new or enhanced properties.
Another emerging set of optical structures for manipulation of light are subwavelength metallic structures [22,23]. More specifically, metallic nanoslit array (NSA) structures are composed of metal transmission gratings with very narrow slits. Such structures have been predicted [22] and later shown [24] to exhibit a phenomenon known as Extra Ordinary Transmission (EOT) [25], in which, under certain resonant wavelength regimes, light can be transmitted in an almost perfect way through these gratings. This almost perfect transmission occurs even when the slits are much smaller than the impinging light wavelength.
An intuitive and clear explanation of the exact mechanism behind this effect was, and still 2 is in some way, a matter of an ongoing scientific exploration, but it is now well established that these resonances correspond to standing surface waves on the NSA [23]. Initially, only resonances for incoming light in TM polarization were suggested and measured in relation to the EOT effect, but later, EOT was suggested [26] and measured [27] in NSA structures for incoming light with TE polarization as well. For an EOT to occur in TE, a thin layer of dielectric material has to be present on top of the metallic grating (see a schematic diagram of such a structure in Fig. 1a).
Recently, we have developed a unified analytical model to explain in an intuitive way the underlying mechanism behind EOT in such structures, for both the TM and TE polarization on the same footing [28]. The emerging picture from this model is that in order for an EOT resonance to occur, the bragg waves, that are the confined eigenmodes of the periodic NSA, must fulfill a standing wave condition between the effective edges of the structure.
Whenever such a condition is fulfilled, a standing waveguide mode which can also be viewed as a Fabri-Perot -like mode arises in the structure, leading to strong local electromagnetic field enhancements at the anti-nodes of this standing wave [23,29]. Local field enhancements were recently used to show a transmission bistability for a nonlinear polymer on top of an array of nanosized holes [30]. This picture is true for both TM and TE polarization with the difference being in the boundaries of the standing wave [28], and therefore in the location of the EM field enhancements as will be discussed late on in this paper.
TPA is a third order nonlinear effect (χ (3) ) which is an intensity dependent process. Therefore, it is expected that enhancing the electromagnetic (EM) field intensities at the vicinity of the nonlinear material will increase the TPA efficiency. Indeed, increasing the efficiency of two-photon absorption in Erbium doped glass using an NSA structure in TM polarization has recently been reported [31]. In this work we show an enhancement of TPA and of light upconversion in NQDs embedded in a metallic subwavelength nanoslit array.
We show that the highly confined EM waves in both TE and TM polarizations in such metallic structures enhances TPA efficiency in NQDs and therefore the light upconversion process by a factor of ∼ 20. We also show that the TPA enhancement measurement is a good probe of the local field enhancements in such metallic nanostructures, and suggest that understanding and exploiting the different geometry of the EOT resonances in TE and TM can lead to new functionalities of devices based on NQDs. An energy level scheme of TPA and the resulting upconversion process.

II. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
To demonstrate the enhancement of a TPA process in NQDs using resonant local field enhancements in metallic NSAs, we fabricated metallic NSA structures covered by a NQDin-polymer matrix. The NSA resonances were designed to occur at wavelengths which are just above half the first excitonic transition of the NQDs, tuned at half the wavelength of the higher excitonic transitions of the NQDs (see Fig. 1c). By exciting the structure with laser pulses at these resonant wavelengths (∼ 1500nm), the strong local field enhancements of the structure enhanced the TPA process in the NQDs, leading to a population of the NQD excited states. These excited states then decay radiatively from the first excitonic transition wavelength (∼ 950nm), leading to light upconversion from the structure. This procedure is schematically illustrated in 1c.
Our samples consist of NIR emitting NQDs in a transparent polymer, embedded in an Aluminum based NSA, as is schematically shown in Fig. 1a. The NQDs investigated in this work are InAs/CdSe core/shell type I [32], dispersed in a polymer matrix of perfluorocyclobutane (PFCB) [33]. A typical emission spectrum of the NQDs is shown in Fig 1b, peaking around ∼ 950nm, corresponding to the emission wavelength of the first excitonic transition, inhomogeneously broadened by the small size distribution of the NQDs. The polymer has a refractive index of n 1.51. The NQD/polymer mixture was spin-coated on the NSA forming a H 1.8µm thick layer (Fig. 1b).
The NSA consists of an Aluminum grating on a glass substrate, as depicted in Fig. 1a with a height of h = 0.25µm. Two different grating periods and slit widths were used, depending on the incoming excitation polarization with respect to the grating (either TE or TM polarizations). For the experiments with an excitation having TM (TE) polarization, the grating had a period of d = 0.8µm (d = 1µm) and a slit width of a = 0.35µm (a = 0.45µm) respectively. These parameters where chosen so that the structure resonances (in both TE and TM) would match the excitation wavelengths required for the TPA process as described above.
The excitation was done using a tunable Optical Parametric Oscillator (OPO) pumped by a mode-locked 80Mhz Ti:Sapphire laser, producing sub-100fs pulses in the near infrared (NIR) spectral range (1400 − 1600nm). The pulse was either TM or TE polarized with respect to the NSA structure. The pulse was slightly focused on the sample, and the resulting upconverted fluorescence was collected to and analyzed by a spectrometer with a Pixis CCD camera (Fig. 1a). This fluorescence intensity was normalized to the fluorescence intensity from an identical reference sample but without the NSA.

III. RESULTS
In order to analyze our experimental results, We first define the total absorption crosssection of the NQDs as: where σ 0 (λ) is due to the linear resonant absorption of the NQD optical transitions, and : Eq. 2 shows that I U C ∝ I 2 . We also define the enhancement factor of the incoming light inside the NSA structure for various excitation wavelengths λ as γ(λ). Therefore, the intensity inside the structure is enhanced as I → γI. As a result, the measured upconverted fluorescence I U C from the NSA structure, normalized to the fluorescence from the reference without the NSA, is equal to γ 2 .
From eq. (2), we expect a quadratic behavior of I U C as we increase the peak power of the excitation laser. This is experimentally confirmed in Fig. 2 where the total fluorescence of the NQDs in a reference sample exhibits such quadratic behavior.  The square of the experimental enhancement intensity factor (γ 2 exp ) is extracted by integrating the full spectra to get the total induced fluorescence and normalizing it to the emission from the reference sample. In addition, we verified that γ is power independent as expected, which is presented in Fig. 3b.
Next, we measured the dependence of γ 2 exp on the excitation wavelength. This dependence is presented by the green dots in Fig. 4a for the TM excitation and in Fig. 4b for TE excitation. It is evident that in both TE and TM, the nonlinear enhancement is strongly wavelength dependent and exhibits a resonant behavior. In order to understand the nature of this resonant behavior, we have measured the transmission spectra of the NSA structure in both polarizations. The corresponding transmission measurements in TM and TE are presented by the blue lines in Fig. 4a Fig. 4 that there is a good correspondence between the spectral location of the peak in γ 2 and the maximal field enhancement in both polarization. This is a strong indication that the mechanism behind the TPA enhancement is the local field enhancements at the EOT resonances. The calculated spatial distribution of the field intensities at those EOT resonances are plotted in Fig. 5

b,d for TE and TM
respectively, normalized to the EM field intensities without the NSA structure. It can be seen that indeed strong local field enhancements are obtained in our structures, reaching a maximal value of ∼ 90 for TE and ∼ 13 for TM.
To compare the theoretical calculations to our experimental results, we first need to obtain the expected nonlinear enhancement factor from the near field calculations. For that, we assumed that the NQD are evenly dispersed in the polymer layer on the metallic grating.
with this assumption, the spatially averaged value of the TPA enhancement factor (γ calc ) should be given by: where I(r) is the calculated field intensity enhancement in each point in the polymer layer in a unit cell of the NSA structure and ε P F CB is the dielectric constant of the polymer ε P F CB . Fig. 6 shows the dependence of γ calc on the excitation wavelength. The largest enhancement for TE is at 1466nm with a maximal value of ∼ 21 and a typical width of 3nm. For the TM polarization the enhancement is broader, peaking at 1505nm. Next, we have to take into account the finite spectral width of the laser pulse (∼ 20nm), which excites the inhomogeneously broadened spectrum of the NQDs inside the resonant structure. This means that different NQDs having a TPA resonance at different wavelengths covered by the laser pulse spectrum experience different laser powers as well as different local field enhancements. To take this effect into account we calculate the expected averaged TPA enhancement by: where (P (λ)) is the excitation laser pulse spectrum and (γ calc (λ)) taken from Eq. 3.

IV. SUMMARY
We have shown enhancement of two-photon absorption processes in nanocrystal quantum dots and of light upconversion from the IR to the NIR spectral regime using a hybrid optical device in which NIR emitting InAs quantum dots were embedded on top a a metallic nanoslit array. Our measurements and calculations show that the underlying mechanism behind the resonant enhancement of this nonlinear optical process is the strong local field enhancements inside the NSA structure which in turn result from the standing EM waves at the EOT resonances. A maximal TPA enhancement of more than 20 was inferred. We also identified, using our numerical model, the "hot spots" in the structure where maximal field enhancement is achieved: in TE polarization, the maximal field of the first EOT resonance occurs mainly at the dielectric waveguide layer on top of the metal grating, while for the first EOT resonance in TM, the maximal field occurs mostly inside the slit and very close to the metal-dielectric interface. This can be used as a guide for designing and optimizing efficient nonlinear devices based on such NSA structures. For example, one can fill the slits and the top dielectric layer with different nonlinear media (such as two different types of NQDs), and control which one will be activated using different polarizations. We note that the maximal enhancement can be much improved by a better design, e.g., using less lossy metal in the IR spectral regime, and optimizing the metal thickness and the slit width.
Our conclusion is that subwavelength metallic nanostructures are promising for a range of possible nonlinear optical devices based on nanocrystal quantum dots.