| Literature DB >> 29172537 |
Janine Keller1, Giacomo Scalari1, Sara Cibella2, Curdin Maissen1, Felice Appugliese1, Ennio Giovine2, Roberto Leoni2, Mattias Beck1, Jérôme Faist1.
Abstract
Ultrastrong light-matter coupling allows the exploration of new states of matter through the interaction of strong vacuum fields with huge electronic dipoles. By using hybrid dipole antenna-split ring resonator-based cavities with extremely small effective mode volumes Veff/λ03 ≃ 6 × 10-10 and surfaces Seff/λ02 ≃ 3.5 × 10-7, we probe the ultrastrong light-matter coupling at 300 GHz to less than 100 electrons located in the last occupied Landau level of a high mobility two-dimensional electron gas, measuring a normalized coupling ratio of ΩR/ωc = 0.36. Effects of the extremely reduced cavity dimensions are observed as the light-matter coupled system is better described by an effective mass heavier than the uncoupled one. These results open the way to ultrastrong coupling at the single-electron level in two-dimensional electron systems.Keywords: Landau levels; THz; Ultrastrong coupling; few electrons; hybrid LC resonator; two-dimensional electron gas
Year: 2017 PMID: 29172537 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b03228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189