54 research outputs found
Bose-Einstein Condensation of Excitons in Bilayer Electron Systems
An ordered state of electrons in solids in which excitons condense was
proposed many years ago as a theoretical possibility but has, until recently,
never been observed. We review recent studies of semiconductor bilayer systems
that provide clear evidence for this phenomenon and explain why exciton
condensation in the quantum Hall regime, where these experiments were
performed, is as likely to occur in electron-electron bilayers as in
electron-hole bilayers. In current quantum Hall exciton condensates, disorder
induces mobile vortices that flow in response to a supercurrent and limit the
extremely large bilayer counterflow conductivity.Comment: 19 pages including 4 figure
Macroscopic coherence of a single exciton state in a polydiacetylene organic quantum wire
We show that a single exciton state in an individual ordered conjugated
polymer chain exhibits macroscopic quantum spatial coherence reaching tens of
microns, limited by the chain length. The spatial coherence of the k=0 exciton
state is demonstrated by selecting two spatially separated emitting regions of
the chain and observing their interference.Comment: 12 pages with 2 figure
Exciton Condensation and Perfect Coulomb Drag
Coulomb drag is a process whereby the repulsive interactions between
electrons in spatially separated conductors enable a current flowing in one of
the conductors to induce a voltage drop in the other. If the second conductor
is part of a closed circuit, a net current will flow in that circuit. The drag
current is typically much smaller than the drive current owing to the heavy
screening of the Coulomb interaction. There are, however, rare situations in
which strong electronic correlations exist between the two conductors. For
example, bilayer two-dimensional electron systems can support an exciton
condensate consisting of electrons in one layer tightly bound to holes in the
other. One thus expects "perfect" drag; a transport current of electrons driven
through one layer is accompanied by an equal one of holes in the other. (The
electrical currents are therefore opposite in sign.) Here we demonstrate just
this effect, taking care to ensure that the electron-hole pairs dominate the
transport and that tunneling of charge between the layers is negligible.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Giant Superfluorescent Bursts from a Semiconductor Magnetoplasma
Currently, considerable resurgent interest exists in the concept of
superradiance (SR), i.e., accelerated relaxation of excited dipoles due to
cooperative spontaneous emission, first proposed by Dicke in 1954. Recent
authors have discussed SR in diverse contexts, including cavity quantum
electrodynamics, quantum phase transitions, and plasmonics. At the heart of
these various experiments lies the coherent coupling of constituent particles
to each other via their radiation field that cooperatively governs the dynamics
of the whole system. In the most exciting form of SR, called superfluorescence
(SF), macroscopic coherence spontaneously builds up out of an initially
incoherent ensemble of excited dipoles and then decays abruptly. Here, we
demonstrate the emergence of this photon-mediated, cooperative, many-body state
in a very unlikely system: an ultradense electron-hole plasma in a
semiconductor. We observe intense, delayed pulses, or bursts, of coherent
radiation from highly photo-excited semiconductor quantum wells with a
concomitant sudden decrease in population from total inversion to zero. Unlike
previously reported SF in atomic and molecular systems that occur on nanosecond
time scales, these intense SF bursts have picosecond pulse-widths and are
delayed in time by tens of picoseconds with respect to the excitation pulse.
They appear only at sufficiently high excitation powers and magnetic fields and
sufficiently low temperatures - where various interactions causing decoherence
are suppressed. We present theoretical simulations based on the relaxation and
recombination dynamics of ultrahigh-density electron-hole pairs in a quantizing
magnetic field, which successfully capture the salient features of the
experimental observations.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure
Transition to a Bose-Einstein condensate of excitons at sub-Kelvin temperatures
Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) is a quantum mechanical phenomenon directly
linked to the quantum statistics of bosons. While cold atomic gases provide a
new arena for exploring the nature of BEC, a long-term quest to confirm BEC of
excitons, quasi-Bose particles formed as a bound state of an electron-hole
pair, has been underway since its theoretical prediction in the 1960s.
Ensembles of electrons and holes are complex quantum systems with strong
Coulomb correlations; thus, it is non-trivial whether nature chooses a form of
exciton BEC. Various systems have been examined in bulk and two-dimensional
semiconductors and also exciton-photon hybrid systems. Among them, the 1s
paraexciton state in a single crystal of Cu2O has been a prime candidate for
realizing three-dimensional BEC. The large binding energy and long lifetime
enable preparation of cold excitons in thermal equilibrium with the lattice and
decoupled from the radiation field. However, collisional loss severely limits
the conditions for reaching BEC. Such a system with a large inelastic cross
section is excluded in atomic BEC experiments, where a small inelastic
scattering rate and efficient elastic scattering are necessary for evaporative
cooling. Here we demonstrate that it is nevertheless possible to achieve BEC by
cooling paraexcitons to sub-Kelvin temperatures in a cold phonon bath. Emission
spectra from paraexcitons in a three-dimensional trap show an anomalous
distribution in a threshold-like manner at the critical number of BEC expected
for ideal bosons. Bosonic stimulated scattering into the condensate and
collisional loss compete and limit the condensate to a fraction of about 1%.
This observation adds a new class of experimentally accessible BEC for
exploring a rich variety of matter phases of electron-hole ensembles.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, Supplementary Information (12 pages, 4 figures)
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High-temperature superfluidity with indirect excitons in van der Waals heterostructures.
All known superfluid and superconducting states of condensed matter are enabled by composite bosons (atoms, molecules and Cooper pairs) made of an even number of fermions. Temperatures where such macroscopic quantum phenomena occur are limited by the lesser of the binding energy and the degeneracy temperature of the bosons. High-critical temperature cuprate superconductors set the present record of ~100 K. Here we propose a design for artificially structured materials to rival this record. The main elements of the structure are two monolayers of a transition metal dichalcogenide separated by an atomically thin spacer. Electrons and holes generated in the system would accumulate in the opposite monolayers and form bosonic bound states--the indirect excitons. The resultant degenerate Bose gas of indirect excitons would exhibit macroscopic occupation of a quantum state and vanishing viscosity at high temperatures
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