| Literature DB >> 26822483 |
Vladimir P Kochereshko1,2, Mikhail V Durnev1,2, Lucien Besombes3, Henri Mariette3, Victor F Sapega1,2, Alexis Askitopoulos4, Ivan G Savenko5,6, Timothy C H Liew7, Ivan A Shelykh7, Alexey V Platonov1,2, Simeon I Tsintzos8, Z Hatzopoulos8, Pavlos G Savvidis9,8, Vladimir K Kalevich1,2, Mikhail M Afanasiev1,2, Vladimir A Lukoshkin1,2, Christian Schneider10, Matthias Amthor10, Christian Metzger10, Martin Kamp10, Sven Hoefling10,11, Pavlos Lagoudakis4, Alexey Kavokin1,4.
Abstract
Light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation, well-known for revolutionising photonic science, has been realised primarily in fermionic systems including widely applied diode lasers. The prerequisite for fermionic lasing is the inversion of electronic population, which governs the lasing threshold. More recently, bosonic lasers have also been developed based on Bose-Einstein condensates of exciton-polaritons in semiconductor microcavities. These electrically neutral bosons coexist with charged electrons and holes. In the presence of magnetic fields, the charged particles are bound to their cyclotron orbits, while the neutral exciton-polaritons move freely. We demonstrate how magnetic fields affect dramatically the phase diagram of mixed Bose-Fermi systems, switching between fermionic lasing, incoherent emission and bosonic lasing regimes in planar and pillar microcavities with optical and electrical pumping. We collected and analyzed the data taken on pillar and planar microcavity structures at continuous wave and pulsed optical excitation as well as injecting electrons and holes electronically. Our results evidence the transition from a Bose gas to a Fermi liquid mediated by magnetic fields and light-matter coupling.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26822483 PMCID: PMC4731768 DOI: 10.1038/srep20091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Magneto-photoluminescence of the 5 μm diameter micropillar sample.
Panels represent different pumping powers: 0.09 mW (a), 0.58 mW (b), 0.85 mW (c), 1 mW (d) and 1.5 mW (e). The excitation laser spot was of 1.5 μm size. Both polariton lasing (a) and a very sharp transition to photon lasing (c–e) are observed.
Figure 2Phase transitions in micropillar samples.
(a,b) Emission pattern and the integrated PL intensity of the 5 μm round pillar at B = 6 T. In (b) spectral integration has been performed over the polariton lasing peak (black circles) and photon laser peak (red circles), for details see Supplementary material. The arrows indicate the onset and offset of the polariton laser (LP1 and LP2) and the photon laser threshold (C). (c) Phase diagram of a 5 μm round pillar. The red circles correspond to the photon lasing threshold (C), the blue squares show the onset of polariton lasing (LP1). The offset of polariton lasing (L2) is shown only indicatively by the boundary between green color and white-green stripes. We cannot extract this threshold from the data with a high accuracy. Note that the polariton lasing transition for zero field reported in Fig. 2c corresponds to a pump power intermediate between those considered in Fig. 1a,b. The lines show the results of simulation. White horizontal bands mark the polariton gas regime, beyond the offset of polariton lasing.
Figure 3Magneto-polariton lasing in a planar microcavity sample.
(a) Power dependence of the integrated PL intensity at different magnetic fields for a 10 μm spot. (b) Scheme of non-resonant polariton formation. (c) Spatially resolved PL spectra in a large pillar showing the diffusion of excitons over 10 μm away from a 2 μm spot. (d–f) Phase diagrams of polariton emission for excitation spot sizes: d = 10, 40 and 100 μm. The white squares and dashed curves show the experimental and theoretical data, respectively.
Figure 4Phase diagrams of the electrically pumped polariton laser.
(a,b) Magnetic and temperature dependent phase diagrams. Dashed lines show the results of our kinetic modelling. (c) Linewidth of the PL emission as a function of injection current, with the onset of polariton and photon lasing marked by dashed lines. The laser structure represented a pillar of 20 μm diameter, see for details ref. 3.