| Literature DB >> 28094281 |
Lucas C Flatten1, David M Coles1,2, Zhengyu He1, David G Lidzey3, Robert A Taylor2, Jamie H Warner1, Jason M Smith1.
Abstract
Exciton-polaritons are quasiparticles consisting of a linear superposition of photonic and excitonic states, offering potential for nonlinear optical devices. The excitonic component of the polariton provides a finite Coulomb scattering cross section, such that the different types of exciton found in organic materials (Frenkel) and inorganic materials (Wannier-Mott) produce polaritons with different interparticle interaction strength. A hybrid polariton state with distinct excitons provides a potential technological route towards in situ control of nonlinear behaviour. Here we demonstrate a device in which hybrid polaritons are displayed at ambient temperatures, the excitonic component of which is part Frenkel and part Wannier-Mott, and in which the dominant exciton type can be switched with an applied voltage. The device consists of an open microcavity containing both organic dye and a monolayer of the transition metal dichalcogenide WS2. Our findings offer a perspective for electrically controlled nonlinear polariton devices at room temperature.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28094281 PMCID: PMC5247603 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms14097
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Two-dimensional WS2 between electrodes in an optical microcavity.
(a) SEM-micrograph of a monolayer WS2 flake deposited on SiO2 terminated DBR, forming one side of the optical microcavity. The arrow denotes the direction of the applied electric field and the red circle the area from which the data were obtained. (b) SEM image of the opposing cavity side, a silver mirror on a silica plinth. (c) Sketch of the two mirrors with silver electrodes on the surface of the DBR giving electrical tunability within the cavity. (d) Absorbance of atomically-thin WS2 for various applied voltages obtained from the position marked with a red circle in a (colour) and the organic dye TDBC (black, scaled by factor 0.5).
Figure 2Electrically controlled hybridization of Frenkel- and Wannier-Mott-excitons in a polariton state.
(a–c) Successive transmission spectra of hybrid WS2-TDBC microcavity for decreasing cavity length from left to right and different applied voltages of −210, 110 and 210 V for a–c, respectively. The white, continuous lines correspond to the uncoupled energies of Frenkel-exciton (TDBC, triangles), Wannier-Mott exciton (WS2, stars) and cavity mode (crosses). The dashed lines in colour show the dispersion for the coupled system consisting of the three polariton branches, lower polariton (LP, yellow, ––), middle polariton (MP, orange, —–) and upper polariton (UP, red, −−), where the terms in brackets denote the name of the state, the line colour and the line style respectively. (d–f) Photonic (cavity mode, blue, continuous), Frenkel-excitonic (TDBC, red, —–) and Wannier-Mott-excitonic (WS2, purple, −−) contribution to the three polariton branches LP, MP and UP for the dispersions plotted above respectively. Two points A (black dashed line) and B (red dashed line) mark cavity lengths at which: (A) Frenkel- and Wannier-Mott-exciton contribution to the middle polariton branch is equal, (B) the cavity length is L=0.48μm and the dominant exciton contribution can be swapped electrically. The numerical value displayed in the MP panel as a percentage gives the value of Frenkel- and Wannier-Mott-exciton contribution β2 and γ2 at point A.
Figure 3Electrical control over polariton composition.
Frenkel- and Wannier-Mott-exciton fraction β and γ in hybrid polariton state for different applied voltages (colour, symbols, left ordinate, blue arrow) and interpolated absorbance peak position of WS2 outside the cavity (black, dashed, right ordinate, grey arrow). The exciton fractions are shown for two points, where point A corresponds to the cavity length at which β=γ (maximal mixing) and point B to a fixed cavity length of L=0.48 μm. The errorbars were obtained by fitting the polariton dispersion (equation (2)) to the transmission data and are of similar size as the symbols. The absorbance peak positions were acquired by fitting a Gaussian lineshape to the absorbance shown in Fig. 1. More information about the error estimation is given in Supplementary Fig. 6 and Supplementary Note 4.