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Dive into the research topics where Frank W. M. van Otten is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank W. M. van Otten.


Japanese Journal of Applied Physics | 2006

Self Assembled InAs/InP Quantum Dots for Telecom Applications in the 1.55 µm Wavelength Range: Wavelength Tuning, Stacking, Polarization Control, and Lasing

R Richard Nötzel; S Sanguan Anantathanasarn; René van Veldhoven; Frank W. M. van Otten; Tj Tom Eijkemans; Achim Trampert; Biswarup Satpati; Y Yohan Barbarin; E.A.J.M. Bente; Ys Yok-Siang Oei; Tjibbe de Vries; E.J. Geluk; Barry Smalbrugge; Mk Meint Smit; Jh Joachim Wolter

Wavelength-tunable InAs quantum dots (QDs) embedded in lattice-matched InGaAsP on InP(100) substrates are grown by metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy (MOVPE). As/P exchange, which causes a QD size and an emission wavelength that are very large, is suppressed by decreasing the QD growth temperature and V–III flow ratio. As/P exchange, QD size and emission wavelength are then reproducibly controlled by the thickness of ultrathin [0–2 monolayers (ML)] GaAs interlayers underneath the QDs. Submonolayer GaAs coverages result in a shape transition from QDs to quantum dashes for a low V–III flow ratio. It is the combination of reduced growth temperature and V–III flow ratio with the insertion of GaAs interlayers of greater than 1 ML thickness which allows the tuning of the emission wavelength of QDs at room temperature in the 1.55 µm wavelength range. Temperature-dependent photoluminescence (PL) measurements reveal the excellent optical properties of the QDs. Widely stacked QD layers are reproduced with identical PL emission to increase the active volume while closely stacked QD layers reveal a systematic PL redshift and linewidth reduction due to vertical electronic coupling, which is proven by the fact that the linear polarization of the cleaved-side PL changes from in-plane to isotropic. Ridge-waveguide laser diodes with stacked QD layers for their active regions exhibit threshold currents at room temperature in continuous-wave mode that are among the lowest threshold currents achieved for InAs/InP QD lasers operating in the 1.55 µm wavelength range.


Nature Communications | 2017

Integrated nano-opto-electro-mechanical sensor for spectrometry and nanometrology

Ž. Zobenica; Rob W. van der Heijden; M. Petruzzella; Francesco Pagliano; Rick Leijssen; Tian Xia; Leonardo Midolo; Michele Cotrufo; Yong Jin Cho; Frank W. M. van Otten; Ewold Verhagen; Andrea Fiore

Spectrometry is widely used for the characterization of materials, tissues, and gases, and the need for size and cost scaling is driving the development of mini and microspectrometers. While nanophotonic devices provide narrowband filtering that can be used for spectrometry, their practical application has been hampered by the difficulty of integrating tuning and read-out structures. Here, a nano-opto-electro-mechanical system is presented where the three functionalities of transduction, actuation, and detection are integrated, resulting in a high-resolution spectrometer with a micrometer-scale footprint. The system consists of an electromechanically tunable double-membrane photonic crystal cavity with an integrated quantum dot photodiode. Using this structure, we demonstrate a resonance modulation spectroscopy technique that provides subpicometer wavelength resolution. We show its application in the measurement of narrow gas absorption lines and in the interrogation of fiber Bragg gratings. We also explore its operation as displacement-to-photocurrent transducer, demonstrating optomechanical displacement sensing with integrated photocurrent read-out.Fully integratable spectrometers have trade-offs between size and resolution. Here, the authors present a nano-opto-electro-mechanical system where the functionalities of transduction, actuation and detection are fully integrated, resulting in an ultra-compact high-resolution spectrometer with a micrometer-scale footprint.


Semiconductor Science and Technology | 2015

In-assisted deoxidation of GaAs substrates for the growth of single InAs/GaAs quantum dot emitters

Tian Xia; Y.-J. Cho; Michele Cotrufo; Ivan Agafonov; Frank W. M. van Otten; Andrea Fiore

We report a systematic study of the In-assisted deoxidation (IAD) of epitaxial GaAs(100) substrates. Optimized IAD conditions resulting in a pit-free and smooth GaAs surface are found. Photoluminescence lines from single quantum dots (QDs) with linewidths in the range of 250–400 μeV are observed from low-density InAs QDs grown at a distance of 10 nm from a GaAs surface deoxidized under an optimized condition. Our study shows that IAD is very promising for application in the growth of nanostructures on patterned GaAs substrates.


Quantum Photonic Devices | 2017

Single photons from electrically driven reconfigurable photonic crystal cavities (Conference Presentation)

S. Birindelli; Francesco Pagliano; Daniele Pellegrino; Z. Zobenica; Michele Cotrufo; Frank W. M. van Otten; Rob W. van der Heijden; Lianhe Li; E. H. Linfield; A Andrea Fiore; M. Petruzzella; Mario Agio; Kartik Srinivasan; Cesare Soci

Due to their deterministic nature and efficiency, devices based on quantum dots (QD) are currently replacing traditional single-photon sources in the most complex quantum optics experiments, such as boson sampling protocols. Embedding these emitters into photonic crystal (PhCs) cavities enables the creation of an array of Purcell-enhanced single photons required to build quantum photonic integrated circuits. So far scaling of the number of these cavity-emitters nodes on a single chip has been hampered by practical problems such as the lack of post-fabrication methods to control their relative detuning and the complexity involved with their optical excitation. Here, we present a tuneable single-photon source combining electrical injection and nano-opto-electromechanical cavity tuning. The device consists of a double-membrane electromechanically tuneable PhC structure. A vertical p-i-n junction, hosted in the top membrane, is exploited to inject current in the QD layer and demonstrate a tunable nano LED whose cavity wavelength can be reversibly varied over 15 nanometers by electromechanically varying the distance between membranes. Besides, electroluminescence from single QD lines coupled to PhC cavities is reported for the first time. The measurement of the second-order autocorrelation function from a cavity-enhanced line proves the anti-bunched character of the emitted light. Since electrical injection does not produce stray pump photons, it makes the integration with superconducting single-photon detectors much more feasible. The large-scale integration of such tuneable single-photon sources, passive optics and waveguide detectors may enable the implementation of fully-integrated boson sampling circuits able to manipulate tens of photons.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

High-resolution spectral and displacement sensing using nano-opto-electro-mechanical systems(Conference Presentation)

Andrea Fiore; Z. Zobenica; Rob W. van der Heijden; M. Petruzzella; Francesco Pagliano; Rick Leijssen; Ewold Verhagen; Tian Xia; Leonardo Midolo; Y.-J. Cho; Frank W. M. van Otten

Nanophotonic structures with narrow optical resonances, such as high-quality factor photonic crystal cavities, in principle enable spectral sensing with high resolution. This can also result in high-sensitivity displacement and/or acceleration sensing if a part of the cavity is compliant. However, the control of the resonance and its optical read-out are complex and usually not integrated with the sensing part. In this talk we will introduce a novel nano-opto-electromechanical system (NOEMS), where actuation, sensing and read-out are integrated in the same device. It consists of a double-membrane photonic crystal cavity, where the resonant wavelength is tuned by electrostatically controlling the separation between the membranes. The output current signal provides direct information about either the wavelength of the incident light or the cavity resonance. This nanophotonic sensing system can be employed to measure the spectrum of incident light, to determine the wavelength of a laser line with pm-range resolution, or equivalently to measure tiny displacements.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2013

Ultrafast electrical modulation of the exciton energy for the dynamic control of cavity quantum electrodynamics

Francesco Pagliano; Frank W. M. van Otten; Tian Xia; Lianhe Li; E. H. Linfield; Andrea Fiore

We report quantum dot photonic crystal microcavity diodes where single exciton lines can be spectrally tuned at frequencies above 2GHz. This opens the way to the ultrafast control of cavity quantum electrodynamics on chip.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Spontaneous emission control of single quantum dots by electrostatic tuning of a double-slab photonic crystal cavity

Leonardo Midolo; Francesco Pagliano; T. B. Hoang; Tian Xia; Frank W. M. van Otten; Lianhe Li; E. H. Linfield; M. Lermer; Sven Höfling; Andrea Fiore

We report the electromechanical control of spontaneous emission of single InAs quantum dots (QDs) embedded in wavelength-tunable double-membrane photonic crystal cavities (PCC). The tuning is achieved by modulating the distance between two parallel GaAs membranes by applying electrostatic forces across a p-i-n diode under reverse bias. The spontaneous emission rate of single dots has been modified by over a factor of ten, tuning the cavity reversibly between on- and off-resonant conditions without altering the emission energy of the dots. We also discuss a possible approach to integrate the double membrane structure with ridge waveguides, for the transmission of light within a photonic chip.


Nature Photonics | 2007

Lasing in metallic- Coated nanocavities

Mt Martin Hill; Ys Yok-Siang Oei; Barry Smalbrugge; Youcai Zhu; Tjibbe de Vries; Peter J. van Veldhoven; Frank W. M. van Otten; Tj Tom Eijkemans; Jaros lstrok; aw P. Turkiewicz; Huug de Waardt; Erik Jan Geluk; Soon-Hong Kwon; Yong-Hee Lee; R Richard Nötzel; Mk Meint Smit


Journal of Crystal Growth | 2011

Combining selective area growth and self-organized strain engineering for site-controlled local InAs/InP quantum dot arrays

Jia Wang; Jiayue Yuan; Frank W. M. van Otten; R. Nötzel


international conference on optical mems and nanophotonics | 2018

Integrated Optomechanical Displacement Sensor Based on a Photonic Crystal Cavity

Federico Galeotti; Ivana Sersic-Vollenbroek; M. Petruzzella; Francesco Pagliano; Z. Zobenica; Frank W. M. van Otten; Hamed Sadeghian Marnani; Rob W. van der Heijden; Andrea Fiore

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Andrea Fiore

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Francesco Pagliano

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Tian Xia

Eindhoven University of Technology

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M. Petruzzella

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Michele Cotrufo

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Rob W. van der Heijden

Eindhoven University of Technology

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R Richard Nötzel

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Tj Tom Eijkemans

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Z. Zobenica

Eindhoven University of Technology

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