| Literature DB >> 34117237 |
Julian Heckötter1, Valentin Walther2,3, Stefan Scheel4, Manfred Bayer1,5, Thomas Pohl2, Marc Aßmann6.
Abstract
The ability to generate and control strong long-range interactions via highly excited electronic states has been the foundation for recent breakthroughs in a host of areas, from atomic and molecular physics to quantum optics and technology. Rydberg excitons provide a promising solid-state realization of such highly excited states, for which record-breaking orbital sizes of up to a micrometer have indeed been observed in cuprous oxide semiconductors. Here, we demonstrate the generation and control of strong exciton interactions in this material by optically producing two distinct quantum states of Rydberg excitons. This is made possible by two-color pump-probe experiments that allow for a detailed probing of the interactions. Our experiments reveal the emergence of strong spatial correlations and an inter-state Rydberg blockade that extends over remarkably large distances of several micrometers. The generated many-body states of semiconductor excitons exhibit universal properties that only depend on the shape of the interaction potential and yield clear evidence for its vastly extended-range and power-law character.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34117237 PMCID: PMC8196172 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23852-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Two-color spectroscopy of excitonic Rydberg series.
a A weak pump laser (blue) excites excitons in the 16p state which interact via the interaction potential V(r) with np excitons that are excited by a weak probe laser (red) at a certain detuning Δ. Egap = 2.17208 eV indicates the band gap. b These inter-state interactions have a profound effect on the probe-exciton dynamics and tend to block their optical generation within pump-probe distances below the blockade radius rbl, as indicated by the violet spheres. c In our experiment, we modulate the pump beam by an optical chopper and use a lock-in amplifier to lock the recording of the transmitted probe photons (sig.) to the modulation frequency (ref.). In this way, the output signal of the photodiode (PD) that collects the probe photons is directly proportional to the pump-induced differential probe transmission ΔI. Examples of the recorded spectra are shown in d, which display a series of clear resonances for probe excitons with principal quantum numbers from n = 6 to n = 20. The increasing signal strength with pump power, P, provides indication for the presence of interactions between pump and probe excitons. A common meanfield treatment of such interactions is shown in panel e for three increasing interaction strengths. Here, the red line denotes the weakest interaction strength, while the blue line corresponds to the largest interaction strength. However, it fails to reproduce the universal maximum and the isosbestic point observed at fixed laser detunings and Δ0, respectively, in the experiment, as indicated in f for the n = 11 resonance. On the other hand, these features are well explained by a theory that accounts for strong exciton correlations and excitation-blockade effects, as shown in g, where again, the red line denotes the weakest and the blue line the largest interaction strength. In e–g, the detuning is normalized to the linewidth γ of the resonance. The underlying spatial correlation function, g(2)(r) between pump and probe excitons, shown in h, displays an extended exciton blockade for distances below the blockade radius rbl, which is on the order of several μm in our experiments.
Fig. 2Observed scaling of the van der Waals coefficient.
Measured values (black dots) and theoretical prediction following Eq. (3) (black line) for the inter-state van der Waals coefficient , that yields the strength of long-range interactions between excitons with different principal quantum numbers n and . Here, is held fixed while varying n, whereby the theory curve has been scaled to match the experiment at n = 18. For , theory and experiment give a simple ~ n7 scaling (blue), which flattens in the opposite limit, when approaching the expected ~ n4 behavior for . The error bars denote the standard deviation.
Fig. 3Universal behavior.
The scaled difference between the maxima and isosbestic points of the transmission signal does not depend on the pump intensity (see Fig. 1f, g) and is shown here as a function of the principal quantum number n of the probe excitons. For homogeneously broadened laser excitation, it becomes a universal quantity that only depends on the type of the interaction and is given by ΔE/ℏγ = 0.45 for van der Waals interactions, V(r) = C6/r6, as indicated by the dashed red line. Phonon coupling leads to asymmetric line broadening and causes slight deviations from this behavior (red solid line) in excellent agreement with the measurements shown by the black dots. Other potentials, such as direct dipole-dipole interactions, V(r) = C3/r3, do not match the observations (gray line). The error bars denote the standard deviation.