We present a temperature-dependent photoluminescence study of silicon optical nanocavities formed by introducing point defects into two-dimensional photonic crystals. In addition to the prominent TO-phonon-assisted transition from crystalline silicon at ∼1.10 eV, we observe a broad defect band luminescence from ∼1.05 to ∼1.09 eV. Spatially resolved spectroscopy demonstrates that this defect band is present only in the region where air holes have been etched during the fabrication process. Detectable emission from the cavity mode persists up to room temperature; in strong contrast, the background emission vanishes for T⩾150 K. An Arrhenius-type analysis of the temperature dependence of the luminescence signal recorded either in resonance with the cavity mode or weakly detuned suggests that the higher temperature stability may arise from an enhanced internal quantum efficiency due to the Purcell effect.
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