R. Kuszelewicz
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by R. Kuszelewicz.
Optics Letters | 2011
Sylvain Barbay; R. Kuszelewicz; A. M. Yacomotti
We show that a monolithic and compact vertical cavity laser with intracavity saturable absorber can emit short excitable pulses. These calibrated optical pulses can be excited as a response to an input perturbation whose amplitude is above a certain threshold. Subnanosecond excitable response is promising for applications to novel all-optical devices for information processing or logical gates.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
Daniele Bajoni; E. Semenova; A. Lemaître; S. Bouchoule; Esther Wertz; P. Senellart; Sylvain Barbay; R. Kuszelewicz; J. Bloch
We report on a new type of optical nonlinearity in a polariton p-i-n microcavity. Abrupt switching between the strong and weak coupling regime is induced by controlling the electric field within the cavity. As a consequence, bistable cycles are observed for low optical powers (2-3 orders of magnitude less than for Kerr induced bistability). Signatures of switching fronts propagating through the whole 300 x 300 microm2 mesa surface are evidenced.
Optics Letters | 2006
Sylvain Barbay; Y. Menesguen; X. Hachair; L. Leroy; I. Sagnes; R. Kuszelewicz
Cavity solitons in semiconductor amplifiers were, from the beginning of their study and observation, obtained either spontaneously or in a controlled manner by local coherent excitation. We describe two experiments that demonstrate coherent and, we believe for the first time, incoherent writing and erasure of cavity solitons in an optically pumped vertical-cavity semiconductor amplifier by short optical pulses.
Nano Letters | 2015
Anisha N. Patel; Ariadna Martinez-Marrades; Vitor Brasiliense; Dmitry Koshelev; Mondher Besbes; R. Kuszelewicz; Catherine Combellas; Gilles Tessier; Frédéric Kanoufi
Transport-reaction processes at individual Ag nanoparticles (NPs) are studied using electrochemistry coupled with in situ 3D light scattering microscopy. Electrochemistry is used to trigger a (i) diffusiophoretic transport mode capable of accelerating and preconcentrating NPs toward an electrode and (ii) subsequent diffusion-controlled oxidation of NPs. Individual NP dissolution rate, analyzed using optical modeling, suggests the intervention of insoluble products. New insights into diverse NPs behaviors highlight the strength of coupled optical-electrochemical 3D microscopies for single-NP studies.
Advances in Optical Technologies | 2011
Sylvain Barbay; R. Kuszelewicz; J.R. Tredicce
We review advances on the experimental study of cavity solitons in VCSELs in the past decade. We emphasize on the design and fabrication of electrically or optically pumped broad-area VCSELs used for CSs formation and review different experimental configurations. Potential applications of CSs in the field of photonics are discussed, in particular the use of CSs for all-optical processing of information and for VCSELs characterization. Prospects on self-localization studies based on vertical cavity devices involving new physical mechanisms are also given.
Optics Letters | 2015
Foued Selmi; R. Braive; G. Beaudoin; I. Sagnes; R. Kuszelewicz; Sylvain Barbay
Neuromimetic systems are systems mimicking the functionalities or architecture of biological neurons and may present an alternative path for efficient computing and information processing. We demonstrate here experimentally temporal summation in a neuromimetic micropillar laser with an integrated saturable absorber. Temporal summation is the property of neurons to integrate delayed input stimuli and to respond by an all-or-none kind of response if the inputs arrive in a sufficiently small time window. Our system alone may act as a fast optical coincidence detector and paves the way to fast photonic spike-processing networks.
IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics | 2003
Sylvain Barbay; Joëlle Koehler; R. Kuszelewicz; T. Maggipinto; I. M. Perrini; Massimo Brambilla
We study optical transverse instabilities in quantum-dot (QD) microresonators. We develop a model for the QD susceptibility taking into account the inhomogeneous broadening of the dot emission. A linear stability analysis and numerical integration of the resulting equations are performed. Special attention is paid to the formation of such structures as optical patterns and cavity solitons, which could play an important role in the field of optical information processing. Implications for actual QD materials are discussed in view of applications.
Faraday Discussions | 2016
Vitor Brasiliense; Pascal Berto; Catherine Combellas; R. Kuszelewicz; Gilles Tessier; Frédéric Kanoufi
Although extremely sensitive, electrical measurements are essentially unable to discriminate complex chemical events involving individual nanoparticles. The coupling of electrochemistry to dark field imaging and spectroscopy allows the triggering of the electrodissolution of an ensemble of Ag nanoparticles (by electrochemistry) and the inference of both oxidation and dissolution processes (by spectroscopy) at the level of a single nanoparticle. Besides the inspection of the dissolution process from optical scattering intensity, adding optical spectroscopy reveals chemical changes through drastic spectral changes. The behaviours of single NPs and NP agglomerates are differentiated: in the presence of thiocyanate ions, the transformation of Ag single nanoparticles to AgSCN is investigated in the context of plasmonic coupling with the electrode; tentative interpretations for optically unresolved groups of nanoparticles are proposed.
Optics Express | 2008
X. Hachair; Sylvain Barbay; T. Elsass; I. Sagnes; R. Kuszelewicz
The transverse spatial structure of an optically-pumped, Vertical External Cavity Surface Emitting Laser is investigated experimentally. The Fresnel number of the laser cavity is controlled with an intracavity lens. We show how the emission profile changes when passing from a low to a high Fresnel number configuration and analyze the RF spectrum of the total laser intensity. Though the laser operates in a multi-longitudinal mode configuration, the transverse profile of the laser emission shows well organized patterns.
Applied Physics Letters | 2005
Sylvain Barbay; Y. Menesguen; I. Sagnes; R. Kuszelewicz
We demonstrate a cavity optimization method for efficient optical pumping of a semiconductor microcavity. An enhanced pumping efficiency makes it possible to pump broad-area microcavities for, e.g., high-power lasers or parallel optical processing of information. This is especially important in the near-infrared where a pump not absorbed into the active material is absorbed into the substrate and converted into heat. We apply the method to optical pumping of a 80μm diameter laser with a spatially uniform pump profile. This method could also prove useful for the design of vertical external cavity surface emitting lasers.