Observation of bosonic condensation in a hybrid monolayer MoSe 2 -GaAs microcavity

Bosonic condensation belongs to the most intriguing phenomena in physics, and was mostly reserved for experiments with ultra-cold quantum gases. More recently, it became accessible in exciton-based solid-state systems at elevated temperatures. Here, we demonstrate bosonic condensation driven by exci...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2018-08, Vol.9 (1), p.3286
Hauptverfasser: Waldherr, Max, Lundt, Nils, Klaas, Martin, Betzold, Simon, Wurdack, Matthias, Baumann, Vasilij, Estrecho, Eliezer, Nalitov, Anton, Cherotchenko, Evgenia, Cai, Hui, Ostrovskaya, Elena A, Kavokin, Alexey V, Tongay, Sefaattin, Klembt, Sebastian, Höfling, Sven, Schneider, Christian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bosonic condensation belongs to the most intriguing phenomena in physics, and was mostly reserved for experiments with ultra-cold quantum gases. More recently, it became accessible in exciton-based solid-state systems at elevated temperatures. Here, we demonstrate bosonic condensation driven by excitons hosted in an atomically thin layer of MoSe , strongly coupled to light in a solid-state resonator. The structure is operated in the regime of collective strong coupling between a Tamm-plasmon resonance, GaAs quantum well excitons, and two-dimensional excitons confined in the monolayer crystal. Polariton condensation in a monolayer crystal manifests by a superlinear increase of emission intensity from the hybrid polariton mode, its density-dependent blueshift, and a dramatic collapse of the emission linewidth, a hallmark of temporal coherence. Importantly, we observe a significant spin-polarization in the injected polariton condensate, a fingerprint for spin-valley locking in monolayer excitons. Our results pave the way towards highly nonlinear, coherent valleytronic devices and light sources.
ISSN:2041-1723