Uncovering temperature-dependent exciton-polariton relaxation mechanisms in hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites

Hybrid perovskites have emerged as a promising material candidate for exciton-polariton (polariton) optoelectronics. Thermodynamically, low-threshold Bose-Einstein condensation requires efficient scattering to the polariton energy dispersion minimum, and many applications demand precise control of p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2023-04, Vol.14 (1), p.2426-11, Article 2426
Hauptverfasser: Laitz, Madeleine, Kaplan, Alexander E. K., Deschamps, Jude, Barotov, Ulugbek, Proppe, Andrew H., García-Benito, Inés, Osherov, Anna, Grancini, Giulia, deQuilettes, Dane W., Nelson, Keith A., Bawendi, Moungi G., Bulović, Vladimir
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hybrid perovskites have emerged as a promising material candidate for exciton-polariton (polariton) optoelectronics. Thermodynamically, low-threshold Bose-Einstein condensation requires efficient scattering to the polariton energy dispersion minimum, and many applications demand precise control of polariton interactions. Thus far, the primary mechanisms by which polaritons relax in perovskites remains unclear. In this work, we perform temperature-dependent measurements of polaritons in low-dimensional perovskite wedged microcavities achieving a Rabi splitting of ℏ Ω R a b i  = 260 ± 5 meV. We change the Hopfield coefficients by moving the optical excitation along the cavity wedge and thus tune the strength of the primary polariton relaxation mechanisms in this material. We observe the polariton bottleneck regime and show that it can be overcome by harnessing the interplay between the different excitonic species whose corresponding dynamics are modified by strong coupling. This work provides an understanding of polariton relaxation in perovskites benefiting from efficient, material-specific relaxation pathways and intracavity pumping schemes from thermally brightened excitonic species. Exciton-polaritons present opportunities for quantum photonics, next generation qubits, and tuning material photophysics. Here Laitz et al. study the temperature dependence of 2D perovskite microcavity polaritons, revealing material-specific relaxation mechanisms towards the control of polariton momentum.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-37772-7