Trion-Polariton Formation in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Microcavities

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Abstract

We demonstrate the formation and tuning of charged trion-polaritons in polymer-sorted (6,5) single-walled carbon nanotubes in a planar metal-clad microcavity at room temperature. The positively charged trion-polaritons were induced by electrochemical doping and characterized by angle-resolved reflectance and photoluminescence spectroscopy. The doping level of the nanotubes within the microcavity was controlled by the applied bias and thus enabled tuning from mainly excitonic to a mixture of exciton and trion transitions. Mode splitting of more than 70 meV around the trion energy and emission from the new lower polariton branch corroborate a transition from exciton-polaritons (neutral) to trion-polaritons (charged). The estimated charge-to-mass ratio of these trion-polaritons is 200 times higher than that of electrons or holes in carbon nanotubes, which has exciting implications for the realization of polaritonic charge transport.

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Möhl, C., Graf, A., Berger, F. J., Lüttgens, J., Zakharko, Y., Lumsargis, V., … Zaumseil, J. (2018). Trion-Polariton Formation in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Microcavities. ACS Photonics, 5(6), 2074–2080. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsphotonics.7b01549

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