Collective Strong Light-Matter Coupling in Hierarchical Microcavity-Plasmon-Exciton Systems.

Ankit Bisht, Jorge Cuadra, Martin Wersäll, Adriana Canales, Tomasz J Antosiewicz, Timur Shegai
Author Information
  1. Ankit Bisht: Department of Physics , Chalmers University of Technology , 412 96 , Göteborg , Sweden.
  2. Jorge Cuadra: Department of Physics , Chalmers University of Technology , 412 96 , Göteborg , Sweden.
  3. Martin Wersäll: Department of Physics , Chalmers University of Technology , 412 96 , Göteborg , Sweden.
  4. Adriana Canales: Department of Physics , Chalmers University of Technology , 412 96 , Göteborg , Sweden.
  5. Tomasz J Antosiewicz: Department of Physics , Chalmers University of Technology , 412 96 , Göteborg , Sweden. ORCID
  6. Timur Shegai: Department of Physics , Chalmers University of Technology , 412 96 , Göteborg , Sweden. ORCID

Abstract

Polaritons are compositional light-matter quasiparticles that arise as a result of strong coupling between the vacuum field of a resonant optical cavity and electronic excitations in quantum emitters. Reaching such a regime is often hard, as it requires materials possessing high oscillator strengths to interact with the relevant optical mode. Two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) have recently emerged as promising candidates for realization of strong coupling regime at room temperature. However, these materials typically provide coupling strengths in the range of 10-40 meV, which may be insufficient for reaching strong coupling with low quality factor resonators. Here, we demonstrate a universal scheme that allows a straightforward realization of strong coupling with 2D materials and beyond. By intermixing plasmonic excitations in nanoparticle arrays with excitons in a WS monolayer inside a resonant metallic microcavity, we fabricate a hierarchical system with the collective microcavity-plasmon-exciton Rabi splitting exceeding ∼500 meV at room temperature. Photoluminescence measurements of the coupled systems show dominant emission from the lower polariton branch, indicating the participation of excitons in the coupling process. Strong coupling has been recently suggested to affect numerous optical- and material-related properties including chemical reactivity, exciton transport, and optical nonlinearities. With the universal scheme presented here, strong coupling across a wide spectral range is within easy reach and therefore exploration of these exciting phenomena can be further pursued in a much broader class of materials.

Keywords

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