An experimental study of strongly modified emission in inverse opal photonic crystals

We present the first experiments that demonstrate strong angle-independent modification of spontaneous emission spectra from laser dyes in photonic crystals, made of inverse opals in titania. We show that both the fluorescence quantum efficiency and weak disorder play a key role in interpreting the experimental data. We compare the angle-independent emission spectra of dye in photonic crystals with spectra from such crystals with much smaller lattice spacings, for which emission is in the long wavelength limit. The ratio of emission power spectra shows inhibition of emission up to a factor � 5 over a large bandwidth of 13% of the first order Bragg resonance frequency. The inhibition shifts to increasing wavelength with the lattice parameter, confirming the photonic nature of the phenomenon. The center frequency and bandwidth of the inhibition agree with the calculated total density of states, but the measured inhibition of the vacuum fluctuations is much larger. This result is confirmed by experiments using different dyes. We likely probe the strongly modulated local photonic density of states, due to the spatially nonuniform distribution of dye molecules over the unit cell.