posted on 2024-04-01, 13:35authored byMalo Bézard, Imene Si Hadj Mohand, Luigi Ruggierio, Arthur Le Roux, Yves Auad, Paul Baroux, Luiz H. G. Tizei, Xavier Checoury, Mathieu Kociak
We
report on the design, realization, and experimental investigation
by spatially resolved monochromated electron energy loss spectroscopy
(EELS) of high-quality-factor cavities with modal volumes smaller
than λ3, with λ being the free-space wavelength
of light. The cavities are based on a slot defect in a 2D photonic
crystal slab made up of silicon. They are optimized for high coupling
of electrons accelerated to 100 kV to quasi-transverse electrical
modes polarized along the slot direction. We studied the cavities
in two geometries and took advantage of the deep sub-optical wavelength
spatial resolution of the electron microscope and high spectral resolution
of the monochromator to comprehensively describe the optical excitations
of the slab. The first geometry, for which the cavities have been
designed, corresponds to an electron beam traveling along the slot
direction. The second consists of the electron beam traveling perpendicular
to the slab. In both cases, a large series of modes is identified.
The dielectric slot mode energies are measured to be in the 0.8–0.85
eV range, as per design, and surrounded by two bands of dielectric
and air modes of the photonic structure. The dielectric even slot
modes, to which the cavity mode belongs, are highly coupled to the
electrons with up to 3.2% probability of creating a slot photon per
incident electron. Although the experimental spectral resolution (around
30 meV) alone does not allow to disentangle cavity photons from other
slot photons, the excellent agreement between the experiments and
finite-difference time-domain simulations allows us to deduce that
among the photons created in the slot, around 30% are stored in the
cavity mode. A systematic study of the energy and coupling strength
as a function of the photonic band gap parameters permits us to foresee
an increase of coupling strength by fine-tuning phase-matching. Our
work demonstrates free electron coupling to high-quality-factor cavities
with low mode densities and sub-λ3 modal volumes,
making it an excellent candidate for applications such as quantum
nano-optics with free electrons.