61 research outputs found
Polariton lasing in high-quality Selenide-based micropillars in the strong coupling regime
We have designed and fabricated all-epitaxial ZnSe-based optical micropillars
exhibiting the strong coupling regime between the excitonic transition and the
confined optical cavity modes. At cryogenic temperatures, under non-resonant
pulsed optical excitation, we demonstrate single transverse mode polariton
lasing operation in the micropillars. Owing to the high quality factors of
these microstructures, the lasing threshold remains low even in micropillars of
the smallest diameter. We show that this feature can be traced back to a
sidewall roughness grain size below 3 nm, and to suppressed in-plane polariton
escape.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Spatio-temporal coherence in vertically emitting GaAs-based electrically driven polariton lasers
Authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support by the state of Bavaria, the DFG within the projects Schn1376-3.1 as well as KL3124/2-1 and the Wurzburg-Dresden Cluster of Excellence on Complexity and Topology in Quantum Matter - ct.qmat. S.H. is grateful for funding received within the EPSRC Hybrid Polaritonics programme grant (EP/M025330/1).We report on the implementation of a GaAs-based, vertically emitting electrically pumped polariton laser operated at cryogenic temperatures. The structure consists of a high quality factor AlGaAs/AlAs microcavity (Q=15 000) with two stacks of four GaAs quantum wells and features a Rabi splitting of 11 meV. Polariton lasing manifests by a clear threshold in the input–output characteristics of our device with a sharp drop in the emission linewidth and a continuous blueshift of 0.7 meV above threshold with increasing injection current. We measure spatial and temporal coherence of our device in the condensed phase by utilizing interference spectroscopy. Our results clearly demonstrate that electrically driven polariton lasers have promise as monolithic polaritonic sources of coherent light.PostprintPeer reviewe
Band gap bowing of binary alloys: Experimental results compared to theoretical tight-binding supercell calculations for CdZnSe
Compound semiconductor alloys of the type ABC find widespread applications as
their electronic bulk band gap varies continuously with x, and therefore a
tayloring of the energy gap is possible by variation of the concentration. We
model the electronic properties of such semiconductor alloys by a multiband
tight-binding model on a finite ensemble of supercells and determine the band
gap of the alloy. This treatment allows for an intrinsic reproduction of band
bowing effects as a function of the concentration x and is exact in the
alloy-induced disorder. In the present paper, we concentrate on bulk CdZnSe as
a well-defined model system and give a careful analysis on the proper choice of
the basis set and supercell size, as well as on the necessary number of
realizations. The results are compared to experimental results obtained from
ellipsometric measurements of CdZnSe layers prepared by molecular beam epitaxy
(MBE) and photoluminescence (PL) measurements on catalytically grown CdZnSe
nanowires reported in the literature.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Exciton-polariton flows in cross-dimensional junctions
The Wurzburg group acknowledges the financial support by the state of Bavaria and the DFG within the project Schn1376-3.1.We study the nonequilibrium exciton-polariton condensation in 1D to 0D and 1D to quasi-2D junctions by means of non-resonant spectroscopy. The shape of our potential landscape allows to probe the resonant transmission of a propagating condensate between a quasi-1D waveguide and cylindrically symmetric states. We observe a distinct mode selection by varying the position of the non-resonant pump laser. Moreover, we study the the case of propagation from a localized trapped condensate state into a waveguide channel. Here, the choice of the position of the injection laser allows us to tune the output in the waveguide. Our measurements are supported by an accurate Ginzburg-Landau modeling of the system shining light on the underlying mechanisms.PostprintPeer reviewe
Optical probing of the Coulomb interactions of an electrically pumped polariton condensate
The authors would like to thank the State of Bavaria for financial support. SM and TL were supported by the NAP Start-Up grant M4081630 and MOE AcRF Tier 1 grant 2016-T1-001-084.We report on optical probing of the Coulomb interactions in an electrically driven exciton-polariton laser. By positioning a weak non-resonant Gaussian continuous wave-beam with a diameter of 2 μm inside an electrical condensate excited in a 20 μm diameter micropillar, we study a repulsion effect which is characteristic of the part-excitonic nature of the microcavity system in strong coupling. It manifests itself in a modified real space distribution of the emission pattern. Furthermore, polariton repulsion results in a continuous blueshift of the emission with increased power of the probe beam. A Gross-Pitaevskii equation approach based on modeling the electrical and optical potentials explains our experimental data.PostprintPeer reviewe
Room temperature organic exciton-polariton condensate in a lattice
Funding: The Würzburg group acknowledges financial support from the state of Bavaria. We also thank the Würzburg–Dresden Cluster of Excellence ct.qmat for financial support.Interacting Bosons in artificial lattices have emerged as a modern platform to explore collective manybody phenomena and exotic phases of matter as well as to enable advanced on-chip simulators. On chip, exciton–polaritons emerged as a promising system to implement and study bosonic non-linear systems in lattices, demanding cryogenic temperatures. We discuss an experiment conducted on a polaritonic lattice at ambient conditions: We utilize fluorescent proteins providing ultra-stable Frenkel excitons. Their soft nature allows for mechanically shaping them in the photonic lattice. We demonstrate controlled loading of the coherent condensate in distinct orbital lattice modes of different symmetries. Finally, we explore the self-localization of the condensate in a gap-state, driven by the interplay of effective interaction and negative effective mass in our lattice. We believe that this work establishes organic polaritons as a serious contender to the well-established GaAs platform for a wide range of applications relying on coherent Bosons in lattices.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Prototype of a bistable polariton field-effect transistor switch
This work has been supported by the State of Bavaria.Microcavity exciton polaritons are promising candidates to build a new generation of highly nonlinear and integrated optoelectronic devices. Such devices range from novel coherent light emitters to reconfigurable potential landscapes for electrooptical polariton-lattice based quantum simulators as well as building blocks of optical logic architectures. Especially for the latter, the strongly interacting nature of the light-matter hybrid particles has been used to facilitate fast and efficient switching of light by light, something which is very hard to achieve with weakly interacting photons. We demonstrate here that polariton transistor switches can be fully integrated in electro-optical schemes by implementing a one-dimensional polariton channel which is operated by an electrical gate rather than by a control laser beam. The operation of the device, which is the polariton equivalent to a field-effect transistor, relies on combining electro-optical potential landscape engineering with local exciton ionization to control the scattering dynamics underneath the gate. We furthermore demonstrate that our device has a region of negative differential resistance and features a completely new way to create bistable behavior.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Evolution of temporal coherence in confined exciton-polariton condensates
© 2018 American Physical Society. We study the influence of spatial confinement on the second-order temporal coherence of the emission from a semiconductor microcavity in the strong coupling regime. The confinement, provided by etched micropillars, has a favorable impact on the temporal coherence of solid state quasicondensates that evolve in our device above threshold. By fitting the experimental data with a microscopic quantum theory based on a quantum jump approach, we scrutinize the influence of pump power and confinement and find that phonon-mediated transitions are enhanced in the case of a confined structure, in which the modes split into a discrete set. By increasing the pump power beyond the condensation threshold, temporal coherence significantly improves in devices with increased spatial confinement, as revealed in the transition from thermal to coherent statistics of the emitted light
Observation of macroscopic valley-polarized monolayer exciton-polaritons at room temperature
Funding: the State of Bavaria and the ERC (unlimit-2D), the DFG via SFB689, GRK 1570 and KO3612/1-1.In this Rapid Communication, we address the chiral properties of valley exciton-polaritons in a monolayer of WS2 in the regime of strong light-matter coupling with a Tamm-plasmon resonance. We observe that the effect of valley polarization, which manifests in the circular polarization of the emitted photoluminescence as the sample is driven by a circularly polarized laser, is strongly enhanced in comparison to bare WS2 monolayers and can even be observed under strongly nonresonant excitation at ambient conditions. In order to explain this effect in more detail, we study the relaxation and decay dynamics of exciton-polaritons in our device, elaborate the role of the dark state, and present a microscopic model to explain the wave-vector-dependent valley depolarization by the linear polarization splitting inherent to the microcavity. We believe that our findings are crucial for designing novel polariton-valleytronic devices which can be operated at room temperature.PostprintPeer reviewe
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