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Dive into the research topics where R. Braive is active.

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Featured researches published by R. Braive.


conference on lasers and electro-optics | 2011

Optomechanical coupling in a two-dimensional photonic crystal defect cavity

Emanuel Gavartin; R. Braive; I. Sagnes; Olivier Arcizet; Alexios Beveratos; Tobias J. Kippenberg; Isabelle Robert-Philip

We experimentally investigate the optomechanical properties of a conventional two-dimensional suspended photonic crystal defect cavity. Particularly, we measure localized mechanical modes in the GHz regime exhibiting high values of the optomechanical vacuum coupling rate exceeding 250 kHz.


Nature Communications | 2013

Polariton condensation in solitonic gap states in a one-dimensional periodic potential

Dimitrii Tanese; Hugo Flayac; D. D. Solnyshkov; A. Amo; A. Lemaître; Elisabeth Galopin; R. Braive; P. Senellart; I. Sagnes; G. Malpuech; J. Bloch

Manipulation of nonlinear waves in artificial periodic structures leads to spectacular spatial features, such as generation of gap solitons or onset of the Mott insulator phase transition. Cavity exciton–polaritons are strongly interacting quasiparticles offering large possibilities for potential optical technologies. Here we report their condensation in a one-dimensional microcavity with a periodic modulation. The resulting mini-band structure dramatically influences the condensation process. Contrary to non-modulated cavities, where condensates expand, here, we observe spontaneous condensation in localized gap soliton states. Depending on excitation conditions, we access different dynamical regimes: we demonstrate the formation of gap solitons either moving along the ridge or bound to the potential created by the reservoir of uncondensed excitons. We also find Josephson oscillations of gap solitons triggered between the two sides of the reservoir. This system is foreseen as a building block for polaritonic circuits, where propagation and localization are optically controlled and reconfigurable.


Frontiers in Optics | 2011

Optomechanical coupling in a two dimensional photonic crystal cavity

Emanuel Gavartin; R. Braive; I. Sagnes; Olivier Arcizet; Alexios Beveratos; Tobias J. Kippenberg; Isabelle Robert

Periodically structured materials can sustain both optical and mechanical modes. Here we investigate and observe experimentally the optomechanical properties of a conventional two-dimensional suspended photonic crystal defect cavity with a mode volume of ∼3(λ/n)3. Two families of mechanical modes are observed: flexural modes, associated to the motion of the whole suspended membrane, and localized modes with frequencies in the GHz regime corresponding to localized phonons in the optical defect cavity of diffraction-limited size. We demonstrate direct measurements of the optomechanical vacuum coupling rate using a frequency calibration technique. The highest measured values exceed 80 kHz, demonstrating strong coupling of optical and mechanical modes in such structures.


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.


The International Journal of Robotics Research | 2011

Electro-osmotic propulsion of helical nanobelt swimmers

Gilgueng Hwang; R. Braive; Laurent Couraud; A. Cavanna; Ouerghi Abdelkarim; Isabelle Robert-Philip; Alexios Beveratos; I. Sagnes; D. Sinan Haliyo; Stéphane Régnier

Micro and nanoscale mobile agents capable of self-propulsion in low Reynolds number fluids would have a great technological impact in many fields. Few known mechanisms are able to propel such devices. Here we describe helical nanobelt (HNB) swimmers actuated by an electric field-generated electro-osmotic force. These HNB swimmers are designed with a head and a tail, similar to natural micro-organisms such as bacteria and their flagella. We show that these electro-osmotic propulsion of HNB swimmers achieve speeds (24 body lengths per second), force (1.3 nN), and pressure (375.5 Pa) above those demonstrated by other artificial swimmers based on physical energy conversion. Although nature’s bacteria are still more dynamic, this paper reports that the demonstrated electro-osmotic HNB microswimmers made a big step toward getting closer to their performances. Moreover, an unusual swimming behavior with discontinuous pumping propulsion, similar to jellyfish, was revealed at or above the speculated marginal limit of linear propulsion. These electro-osmosis propelled HNB swimmers might be used as biomedical carriers, wireless manipulators, and as local probes for rheological measurements.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Ultra-low threshold polariton lasing in photonic crystal cavities

Stefano Azzini; Dario Gerace; Matteo Galli; I. Sagnes; R. Braive; A. Lemaître; J. Bloch; Daniele Bajoni

The authors show clear experimental evidence of lasing of exciton polaritons confined in L3 photonic crystal cavities. The samples are based on an InP membrane in air containing five InAsP quantum wells. Polariton lasing is observed with thresholds as low as 120 nW, below the Mott transition, while conventional photon lasing is observed for a pumping power one to three orders of magnitude higher.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Ultrafast all-optical switching and error-free 10 Gbit/s wavelength conversion in hybrid InP-silicon on insulator nanocavities using surface quantum wells

Alexandre Bazin; Kevin Lenglé; Paul Monnier; Laurent Bramerie; R. Braive; G. Beaudoin; I. Sagnes; Rama Raj; Fabrice Raineri

Ultrafast switching with low energies is demonstrated using InP photonic crystal nanocavities embedding InGaAs surface quantum wells heterogeneously integrated to a silicon on insulator waveguide circuitry. Thanks to the engineered enhancement of surface non radiative recombination of carriers, switching time is obtained to be as fast as 10 ps. These hybrid nanostructures are shown to be capable of achieving systems level performance by demonstrating error free wavelength conversion at 10 Gbit/s with 6 mW switching powers.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Scalable implementation of strongly coupled cavity-quantum dot devices

Adrien Dousse; J. Suffczyński; R. Braive; A. Miard; A. Lemaître; I. Sagnes; L. Lanco; J. Bloch; P. Voisin; P. Senellart

Using low temperature in situ optical lithography, we fabricate pillar microcavities with quality factors around 2×104. Each pillar embeds a spatially and spectrally resonant single InGaAs quantum dot (QD). Light-matter strong coupling regime is reached for 100% of the fabricated pillars for which the resonance can be tuned through temperature. This is a demonstration of scalable and deterministic implementation of strongly coupled cavity-QD devices.


Optics Express | 2009

Thermo-optical dynamics in an optically pumped Photonic Crystal nano-cavity

Maia Brunstein; R. Braive; R. Hostein; Alexios Beveratos; Isabelle Robert-Philip; I. Sagnes; Timothy Karle; A. M. Yacomotti; Juan Ariel Levenson; V. Moreau; Gilles Tessier; Y. De Wilde

Linear and non-linear thermo-optical dynamical regimes were investigated in a photonic crystal cavity. First, we have measured the thermal relaxation time in an InP-based nano-cavity with quantum dots in the presence of optical pumping. The experimental method presented here allows one to obtain the dynamics of temperature in a nanocavity based on reflectivity measurements of a cw probe beam coupled through an adiabatically tapered fiber. Characteristic times of 1.0+/-0.2 micros and 0.9+/-0.2 micros for the heating and the cooling processes were obtained. Finally, thermal dynamics were also investigated in a thermo-optical bistable regime. Switch-on/off times of 2 micros and 4 micros respectively were measured, which could be explained in terms of a simple non-linear dynamical representation.

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I. Sagnes

Université Paris-Saclay

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Isabelle Robert-Philip

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexios Beveratos

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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G. Beaudoin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sylvain Barbay

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Izo Abram

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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L. Le Gratiet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Rama Raj

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A. Lemaître

Université Paris-Saclay

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Fabrice Raineri

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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