The light-matter interaction associated with a two-dimensional excitonic transition coupled to a zero-dimensional photonic cavity is fundamentally different from cavity-coupled localized excitations in quantum dots or color centers, which have negligible spatial extent compared to the cavity-confined mode profile. We provide a succinct expression for calculating the light-matter interaction of a two-dimensional optical transition coupled to a zero-dimensional confined cavity mode. From this expression, we found there is an optimal spatial extent of the excitonic transition that maximizes such an interaction strength due to the competition between minimizing the excitonic envelope function area and maximizing the total integrated field. We also found that at near zero exciton-cavity detuning, the direct transmission efficiency of a waveguide-integrated cavity can be severely suppressed, which suggests performing experiments using a side-coupled cavity.

Optimal condition to probe strong coupling of two-dimensional excitons and zero-dimensional cavity modes

Gerace D.
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Andreani L. C.
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
2021-01-01

Abstract

The light-matter interaction associated with a two-dimensional excitonic transition coupled to a zero-dimensional photonic cavity is fundamentally different from cavity-coupled localized excitations in quantum dots or color centers, which have negligible spatial extent compared to the cavity-confined mode profile. We provide a succinct expression for calculating the light-matter interaction of a two-dimensional optical transition coupled to a zero-dimensional confined cavity mode. From this expression, we found there is an optimal spatial extent of the excitonic transition that maximizes such an interaction strength due to the competition between minimizing the excitonic envelope function area and maximizing the total integrated field. We also found that at near zero exciton-cavity detuning, the direct transmission efficiency of a waveguide-integrated cavity can be severely suppressed, which suggests performing experiments using a side-coupled cavity.
2021
Applied Physics/Condensed Matter/Materials Science encompasses the resources of three related disciplines: Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Physics, and Materials Science. The applied physics resources are concerned with the applications of topics in condensed matter as well as optics, vacuum science, lasers, electronics, cryogenics, magnets and magnetism, acoustical physics and mechanics. The condensed matter physics resources are concerned with the study of the structure and the thermal, mechanical, electrical, magnetic and optical properties of condensed matter. They include superconductivity, surfaces, interfaces, thin films, dielectrics, ferroelectrics and semiconductors. The materials science resources are concerned with the physics and chemistry of materials and include ceramics, composites, alloys, metals and metallurgy, nanotechnology, nuclear materials, adhesion and adhesives. Resources dealing with polymeric materials are listed in the Organic Chemistry/Polymer Science category.
Esperti anonimi
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
104
23
235436
8
https://journals.aps.org/prb/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevB.104.235436
4
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Rosser, D.; Gerace, D.; Andreani, L. C.; Majumdar, A.
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1451865
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