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Light Controlling at Subwavelength Scales in Nanophotonic Systems: Physics and Applications

Posted on:2016-03-29Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Washington University in St. LouisCandidate:Shen, YuechengFull Text:PDF
GTID:1470390017478458Subject:Optics
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
The capability of controlling light at scales that are much smaller than the operating wave-length enables new optical functionalities, and opens up a wide range of applications. Such a capability is out of the realm of conventional optical approaches. This dissertation aims to explore the light-matter interactions at nanometer scale, and to investigate the novel scien-tific and industrial applications. In particular, we will explain how to detect nanoparticles using an ultra-sensitive nano-sensor; we will also describe a photonic diode which gener-ates a unidirectional flow of single photons; Moreover, in an one-dimensional waveguide QED system where the fermionic degree of freedom is present, we will show that strong photon-photon interactions can be generated through scattering means, leading to photonic bunching and anti-bunching with various applications. Finally, we will introduce a mecha-nism to achieve super-resolution to discern fine features that are orders of magnitude smaller than the illuminating wavelength. These research projects incorporate recent advances in quantum nanophotonics, nanotechnologies, imaging reconstruction techniques, and rigorous numerical simulations.
Keywords/Search Tags:Applications
PDF Full Text Request
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