Berlin 2024 – wissenschaftliches Programm
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HL: Fachverband Halbleiterphysik
HL 43: Optical Properties II
HL 43.1: Vortrag
Donnerstag, 21. März 2024, 09:30–09:45, EW 561
Polarized room-temperature polariton lasing in elliptical microcavities filled with fluorescent proteins — •Marti Struve1, Christoph Bennenhei1, Sven Stephan1,2, Nils Kunte1, Victor N. Mitryakhin1, Falk Eilenberger3, Jürgen Ohmer4, Utz Fischer4, Martin Silies2, Christian Schneider1, and Martin Esmann1 — 1Institute for Physics, Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Germany — 2University of Applied Sciences Emden/Leer, Germany — 3Institute of Applied Physics, Abbe Center of Photonics, Friedrich Schiller University Jena — 4Department of Biochemistry, University of Würzburg, Germany
Excitons in organic semiconductors can couple strongly to cavity photons forming exciton polaritons at ambient conditions. In artificial photonic potentials they are an emerging platform to study polariton lasing and Bose-Einstein condensation [1,2]. In this work, we study the polarization properties of fluorescent proteins enclosed by distributed Bragg reflectors with elliptical indentations [3]. We show experimentally and numerically that the structural anisotropy of the elliptical potential and the internal TE-TM splitting of dielectric Bragg reflectors leads to a distinct polarization splitting. This splitting enforces condensation into one polaritonic mode with linear polarization. Our devices have relevant applications for the engineering and tuning of polarization in room temperature polariton lasers through additional degrees of freedom. References [1] S. Betzold et al. ACS Photonics 7, 384 (2020). [2] M. Dusel et al. Nano Lett. 21, 6398 (2021). [3] C. Bennenhei, M. Struve et al. Opt. Mater. Express 13, 2633 (2023).
Keywords: Strong coupling; exciton polariton; Microcavity; fluoresent protein; polarization engineering