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Dive into the research topics where L. Le Gratiet is active.

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Featured researches published by L. Le Gratiet.


Applied Physics Letters | 2005

Indistinguishable single photons from a single-quantum dot in a two-dimensional photonic crystal cavity

S. Laurent; S. Varoutsis; L. Le Gratiet; A. Lemaître; I. Sagnes; Fabrice Raineri; Ariel Levenson; Isabelle Robert-Philip; Izo Abram

We report on the spontaneous emission of a single-quantum dot embedded in a two-dimensional photonic crystal cavity. The resonant coupling between the dot and the strongly localized optical mode significantly shortens the spontaneous emission lifetime, so that the coherence time of the emitted photons is dominated by radiative effects: The emitted photons are indistinguishable, with a mean wave-packet overlap as high as 72%.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2010

Heterogeneous integration and precise alignment of InP-based photonic crystal lasers to complementary metal-oxide semiconductor fabricated silicon-on-insulator wire waveguides

Timothy Karle; Yacine Halioua; Fabrice Raineri; Paul Monnier; R. Braive; L. Le Gratiet; G. Beaudoin; I. Sagnes; Günther Roelkens; F. Van Laere; D. Van Thourhout; Rama Raj

The integration of two-dimensional III-V InP-based photonic crystal and silicon wire waveguides is achieved through an accurate alignment of the two optical levels using mix-and-match deep ultraviolet (DUV)/electron beam lithography. The adhesively bonded structures exhibit an enhancement of light emission at frequencies where low group velocity modes of the photonic crystal line defect waveguides occur. Pulsed laser operation is obtained from these modes at room temperature under optical pumping. The laser light is coupled out of the Si waveguide via grating couplers directly to single mode fiber.


Optics Express | 2007

Continuous-wave operation of photonic band-edge laser near 1.55 μm on silicon wafer

G. Vecchi; Fabrice Raineri; I. Sagnes; A. M. Yacomotti; Paul Monnier; Timothy Karle; K-H. Lee; R. Braive; L. Le Gratiet; S. Guilet; G. Beaudoin; A. Talneau; S. Bouchoule; Ariel Levenson; Rama Raj

We report on the continuous-wave operation of a band edge laser at room temperature near 1.55 μm in an InGaAs/InP photonic crystal. A flat dispersion band-edge photonic mode is used for surface normal operation. The photonic crystal slab is integrated onto a Silicon chip by means of Au/In bonding technology, which combines two advantages, efficient heat sinking and broad band reflectivity.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2015

Edge states in polariton honeycomb lattices

Marijana Milićević; Tomoki Ozawa; P. Andreakou; Iacopo Carusotto; Thibaut Jacqmin; Elisabeth Galopin; A. Lemaître; L. Le Gratiet; I. Sagnes; J. Bloch; A. Amo

The experimental study of edge states in atomically-thin layered materials remains a challenge due to the difficult control of the geometry of the sample terminations, the stability of dangling bonds and the need to measure local properties. In the case of graphene, localised edge modes have been predicted in zig-zag and bearded edges, characterised by flat dispersions connecting the Dirac points. Polaritons in semiconductor microcavities have recently emerged as an extraordinary photonic platform to emulate 1D and 2D Hamiltonians, allowing the direct visualization of the wavefunctions in both real- and momentum-space as well as of the energy dispersion of eigenstates via photoluminescence experiments. Here we report on the observation of edge states in a honeycomb lattice of coupled micropillars. The lowest two bands of this structure arise from the coupling of the lowest energy modes of the micropillars, and emulate the {\pi} and {\pi}* bands of graphene. We show the momentum space dispersion of the edge states associated to the zig-zag and bearded edges, holding unidimensional quasi-flat bands. Additionally, we evaluate polarisation effects characteristic of polaritons on the properties of these states.


Optics Letters | 2010

Demonstration of coherent emission from high-β photonic crystal nanolasers at room temperature

R. Hostein; R. Braive; L. Le Gratiet; A. Talneau; G. Beaudoin; Isabelle Robert-Philip; I. Sagnes; Alexios Beveratos

We report on lasing at room temperature and at telecommunications wavelength from photonic crystal nanocavities based on InAsP/InP quantum dots. Such laser cavities with a small modal volume and high quality factor display a high spontaneous emission coupling factor (beta). Lasing is confirmed by measuring the second-order autocorrelation function. A smooth transition from chaotic to coherent emission is observed, and coherent emission is obtained at eight times the threshold power.


Optics Letters | 2011

Deformable two-dimensional photonic crystal slab for cavity optomechanics

Thomas Antoni; Aurélien Kuhn; T. Briant; P.-F. Cohadon; A. Heidmann; R. Braive; Alexios Beveratos; Izo Abram; L. Le Gratiet; I. Sagnes; Isabelle Robert-Philip

We have designed photonic crystal suspended membranes with optimized optical and mechanical properties for cavity optomechanics. Such resonators sustain vibration modes in the megahertz range with quality factors of a few thousand. Thanks to a two-dimensional square lattice of holes, their reflectivity at normal incidence at 1064 nm reaches values as high as 95%. These two features, combined with the very low mass of the membrane, open the way to the use of such periodic structures as deformable end mirrors in Fabry-Perot cavities for the investigation of cavity optomechanical effects.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Radiation patterns from coupled photonic crystal nanocavities

Maia Brunstein; Timothy Karle; I. Sagnes; Fabrice Raineri; J. Bloch; Yacine Halioua; G. Beaudoin; L. Le Gratiet; Juan Ariel Levenson; A. M. Yacomotti

We report on far field measurements on two coupled photonic crystal nanocavities. The distinct features of the antisymmetric modes (minima of intensity at zero-emission angles) allow us to demonstrate a π-phase difference between the cavity fields, a clear signature of evanescent coupling. Good agreement between experimental results and simulated radiation patterns has been found.


Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2008

Anisotropic and Smooth Inductively Coupled Plasma Etching of III-V Laser Waveguides Using HBr- O2 Chemistry

S. Bouchoule; S. Azouigui; S. Guilet; G. Patriarche; L. Largeau; Anthony Martinez; L. Le Gratiet; A. Lemaître; F. Lelarge

HBr inductively coupled plasma (ICP) etching is investigated to realize ridge laser waveguides on InP and GaAs substrates. It has been reported that pure HBr chemistry leads to undercut ridge profiles when a hard dielectric mask is used. In this paper we show that a passivation layer can build up on the sidewalls and prevent lateral etching at high ICP powers if a Si wafer is used as the sample tray. Ex situ energy-dispersive X-ray analysis coupled to transmission electron microscopy shows that the passivation layer is a Si-rich silicon oxide. Vertical sidewalls, a smooth etched surface, and a moderate etch rate compatible with the processing of shallow ridge lasers can be obtained for InP-based heterostructures. The optimized HBr etching process is used to etch InAs quantum dot shallow ridge lasers grown on InP(100) substrate and compared to a classical HCl selective chemical etch. The waveguide losses of the HBr-etched waveguide do not differ from those of the chemically etched waveguide by more than 1 cm -1 . Finally, we show that a similar passivation mechanism can be obtained during HBr ICP etching of GaAs/AlGaAs ridge waveguides, demonstrating that the same HBr (-O 2 ) chemistry is suitable for both GaAs and InP systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Probing a Dissipative Phase Transition via Dynamical Optical Hysteresis

S. R. K. Rodriguez; Wim Casteels; F. Storme; N. Carlon Zambon; I. Sagnes; L. Le Gratiet; Elisabeth Galopin; A. Lemaître; A. Amo; Cristiano Ciuti; J. Bloch

We experimentally explore the dynamical optical hysteresis of a semiconductor microcavity as a function of the sweep time. The hysteresis area exhibits a double power law decay due to the influence of fluctuations, which trigger switching between metastable states. Upon increasing the average photon number and approaching the thermodynamic limit, the double power law evolves into a single power law. This algebraic behavior characterizes a dissipative phase transition. Our findings are in good agreement with theoretical predictions for a single mode resonator influenced by quantum fluctuations, and the present experimental approach is promising for exploring critical phenomena in photonic lattices.


Nature Communications | 2016

Interaction-induced hopping phase in driven-dissipative coupled photonic microcavities

S. R. K. Rodriguez; A. Amo; I. Sagnes; L. Le Gratiet; Elisabeth Galopin; A. Lemaître; J. Bloch

The Bose-Hubbard model (BHM) describes bosons hopping across sites and interacting on-site. Inspired by the success of BHM simulators with atoms in optical lattices, proposals for implementing the BHM with photons in coupled nonlinear cavities have recently emerged. Two coupled semiconductor microcavities constitute a model system where the hopping, interaction and decay of exciton polaritons—mixed light-matter quasiparticles—can be engineered in combination with site-selective coherent driving to implement the driven-dissipative two-site optical BHM. Here we explore the interplay of interference and nonlinearity in this system, in a regime where three distinct density profiles can be observed under identical driving conditions. We demonstrate how the phase acquired by polaritons hopping between cavities can be controlled through polariton-polariton interactions. Our results open new perspectives for synthesizing density-dependent gauge fields using polaritons in two-dimensional multicavity systems.

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I. Sagnes

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A. Lemaître

Université Paris-Saclay

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I. Sagnes

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Isabelle Robert-Philip

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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G. Beaudoin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexios Beveratos

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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R. Braive

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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S. Guilet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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G. Patriarche

Université Paris-Saclay

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A. Ramdane

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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