Microcavity design for low threshold polariton condensation with ultrashort optical pulse excitation

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Abstract

We present a microcavity structure with a shifted photonic stop-band to enable efficient non-resonant injection of a polariton condensate with spectrally broad femtosecond pulses. The concept is demonstrated theoretically and confirmed experimentally for a planar GaAs/AlGaAs multilayer heterostructure pumped with ultrashort near-infrared pulses while photoluminescence is collected to monitor the optically injected polariton density. As the excitation wavelength is scanned, a regime of polariton condensation can be reached in our structure at a consistently lower fluence threshold than in a state-of-the-art conventional microcavity. Our microcavity design improves the polariton injection efficiency by a factor of 4, as compared to a conventional microcavity design, when broad excitation pulses are centered at a wavelength of λ = 740 nm. Most remarkably, this improvement factor reaches 270 when the excitation wavelength is centered at 750 nm.

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Poellmann, C., Leierseder, U., Galopin, E., Lemaître, A., Amo, A., Bloch, J., … Ménard, J. M. (2015). Microcavity design for low threshold polariton condensation with ultrashort optical pulse excitation. Journal of Applied Physics, 117(20). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4921586

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