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      Theory and experiments of disorder-induced resonance shifts and mode edge broadening in deliberately disordered photonic crystal waveguides

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          Abstract

          We study both theoretically and experimentally the effects of introducing deliberate disorder in a slow-light photonic crystal waveguide on the photon density of states. We first introduce a theoretical model that includes both deliberate disorder through statistically moving the hole centres in the photonic crystal lattice and intrinsic disorder caused by manufacturing imperfections. We demonstrate a disorder-induced mean blueshift and an overall broadening of the photonic density of states for various amounts of deliberate disorder. By comparing with measurements from a GaAs photonic crystal waveguide, we find good qualitative agreement between theory and experiment which highlights the importance of carefully including local field effects for modelling high-index contrast perturbations. Our work also demonstrates the importance of using asymmetric dielectric polarizabilities for modelling positive and negative dielectric perturbations when modelling a perturbed dielectric interface in photonic crystal platforms.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          11 May 2015
          Article
          10.1103/PhysRevA.92.023849
          1505.02836
          44eed3bf-ef79-4a3a-974e-49f3f0d23c11

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          Phys. Rev. A 92, 023849 (2015)
          10 pages, 4 figures
          physics.optics cond-mat.mes-hall

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