Theory of High-Temperature Superfluorescence in Hybrid Perovskite Thin Films
The recent discovery of high-temperature superfluorescence in hybrid perovskite thin films has opened new possibilities for harnessing macroscopic quantum phenomena in nanotechnology. This study aimed to elucidate the mechanism that enables high-temperature superfluorescence in these systems. The pr...
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Zusammenfassung: | The recent discovery of high-temperature superfluorescence in hybrid
perovskite thin films has opened new possibilities for harnessing macroscopic
quantum phenomena in nanotechnology. This study aimed to elucidate the
mechanism that enables high-temperature superfluorescence in these systems. The
proposed model describes a quasi-2D Wannier exciton in a thin film that
interacts with phonons via the longitudinal optical phonon-exciton Frohlich
interaction. We show that the superradiant properties of the coherent state in
hybrid perovskites are stable against perturbations caused by the longitudinal
optical phonon-exciton Frohlich interaction. Using the multiconfiguration
Hartree approach, we derive semiclassical equations of motion for a
single-exciton wavefunction, where the vibrational degrees of freedom interact
with the Wannier exciton through a mean-field Hartree term. Superradiance is
effectively described by a non-Hermitian term in the Hamiltonian. The analysis
was then extended to multiple excited states using the semiclassical
Hamiltonian as the basic model. We demonstrate that the ground state of the
model exciton Hamiltonian with long-range interactions is a symmetric Dicke
superradiant state, where the Frohlich interaction is nullified. The additional
density matrix-based consideration draws an analogy between this system and
stable systems, where the conservation laws determine the nullification of the
constant (momentum-independent) decay rate part. In the exciton-phonon system,
nullification is associated with the absence of a momentum-independent
component in the Wannier exciton-phonon interaction coupling function. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.15169 |