| Literature DB >> 31852925 |
Thomas J Sturges1, Mitchell D Anderson2,3, Adam Buraczewski4, Morteza Navadeh-Toupchi2, Albert F Adiyatullin2,5, Fauzia Jabeen2,6, Daniel Y Oberli2, Marcia T Portella-Oberli2, Magdalena Stobińska4.
Abstract
We present an experimental signature of the Anderson localisation of microcavity polaritons, and provide a systematic study of the dependence on disorder strength. We reveal a controllable degree of localisation, as characterised by the inverse-participation ratio, by tuning the positional disorder of arrays of interacting mesas. This constitutes the realisation of disorder-induced localisation in a driven-dissipative system. In addition to being an ideal candidate for investigating localisation in this regime, microcavity polaritons hold promise for low-power, ultra-small devices and their localisation could be used as a resource in quantum memory and quantum information processing.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31852925 PMCID: PMC6920441 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-55673-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of the system geometry. A bird’s eye view of a region of the device is shown for (a) no disorder δ = 0 and (b) maximum disorder δ = 1, along with the lattice vectors . (c) A side-view of the active region with the quantum well (QW) shown in red.
Figure 2Signature of localisation. Figures (a–d) show the real-space photoluminescence images under weak (P = 100 mW) nonresonant excitation, whereas figures (e–h) show the polariton density in the numerical model. In both cases the results are normalized to account for the Gaussian pump distribution (see Methods) and the disorder levels are (a,e) δ = 0, (b,f) δ = 0.284, (c,g) δ = 0.572, (d,h) δ = 1. In the absence of disorder we see a more homogeneous distribution among the mesas, whereas disorder induces the onset of patches of localisation. Also shown are plots that reveal how the IPR increases with disorder for (i) experiment, and (j) theory. The polariton nonlinearity in (j) is g = g0 = 2.4 × 10−3 meV.μm2. The inset of (j) shows the result for g = −g0 (blue dotted line), g = 0 (green dot-dashed line), g = g0 (red solid line), and g = 10g0 (black dashed line). The lines are just a guide for the eye. In the experimental figures the cavity-exciton detuning is 2 meV. The simulation parameters are m = 5 × 10−5 m, R = 0.4 meV.μm2, γ = 0.5 meV, g = 2.4 × 10−3 meV.μm2, V0 = 9 meV, γ = 2 meV, and P0 = 2γγ/R. Here, V0 is the maxima of the trapping potential, which we model as a radially symmetric sigmoid function for each mesa.
Figure 3Tuning the localisation through system parameters. Dependence of the IPR on (a) the polariton lifetime, and (b) the polariton-reservoir exchange rate. In both figures δ = 1. The other simulation parameters are given in Fig. 2.