2 research outputs found
Shaping potential landscape for organic polariton condensates in double-dye cavities
We investigate active spatial control of polariton condensates independently
of the polariton-, gain-inducing excitation profile. This is achieved by
introducing an extra intracavity semiconductor layer, non-resonant to the
cavity mode. Saturation of the optical absorption in the uncoupled layer
enables the ultra-fast modulation of the effective refractive index and,
through excited-state absorption, the polariton dissipation. Utilising these
mechanisms, we demonstrate control over the spatial profile and density of a
polariton condensate at room temperature
Room temperature, cascadable, all-optical polariton universal gates
Abstract Today, almost all information processing is performed using electronic logic circuits operating at several gigahertz frequency. All-optical logic holds the promise to allow for up to three orders of magnitude higher speed. Whereas essential all-optical transistor functionalities were demonstrated across a range of platforms, utilising them to implement a complete Boolean logic gate set and in particular negation, i.e. switching off an optical signal with another, weaker, optical signal, poses a major challenge. Here, we realize a cascadable NOT gate by introducing the concept of non-ground-state polariton amplification in organic semiconductor microcavities under non-resonant optical excitation. We unravel the importance of vibron-mediated stimulated scattering in room temperature operation of the inverter. Moreover, we extend the concept to a multi-input universal NOR logic gate, where in the presence of any of the input signals non-ground-state amplification supersedes spontaneous ground-state condensation, resulting in a NOR gate with ~1 ps switching time. The realisation of an ultrafast universal logic gate constitutes an essential step for more complex optical circuitry that could boost information processing applications