Engineering polariton non-linearity in organic and hybrid-semiconductor microcavities
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Southampton
Department Name: Sch of Physics and Astronomy
Abstract
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Publications
Liao Y
(2014)
Highly Efficient Flexible Hybrid Nanocrystal-Cu(In,Ga)Se 2 (CIGS) Solar Cells
in Advanced Energy Materials
Cilibrizzi P
(2014)
Linear wave dynamics explains observations attributed to dark solitons in a polariton quantum fluid.
in Physical review letters
Poltavtsev S
(2014)
Spin noise spectroscopy of a single quantum well microcavity
in Physical Review B
Coles DM
(2014)
Polariton-mediated energy transfer between organic dyes in a strongly coupled optical microcavity.
in Nature materials
Poltavtsev S
(2014)
Optics of spin-noise-induced gyrotropy of an asymmetric microcavity
in Physical Review B
Tsotsis P
(2014)
Tuning the Energy of a Polariton Condensate via Bias-Controlled Rabi Splitting
in Physical Review Applied
Lagoudakis P
(2014)
Polariton condensates: Going soft.
in Nature materials
Christogiannis N
(2013)
Characterizing the Electroluminescence Emission from a Strongly Coupled Organic Semiconductor Microcavity LED
in Advanced Optical Materials
Coles D
(2013)
Imaging the polariton relaxation bottleneck in strongly coupled organic semiconductor microcavities
in Physical Review B
Grivas C
(2013)
Single-mode tunable laser emission in the single-exciton regime from colloidal nanocrystals
in Nature Communications
Description | Our research has underpinned some of the recent advances in the first observations of organic polariton condensation and polariton-mediated energy transfer achieved between different organic materials. |
Exploitation Route | We believe that our research will make polaritonics the basis for future optoelectronic technologies, including thresholdless lasers, THz emitters (with applications in non-invasive medical imaging and explosives detection), and a range of new quantum information technologies. Indeed, by modifying the basic electronic functionality of materials, hybrid polaritonics could have even wider impact in the areas from chemical sensing to catalysis and photo-biology. |
Sectors | Education,Energy |
URL | http://www.hybrid.soton.ac.uk/ |
Description | University of Southampton |
Amount | £130,000 (GBP) |
Funding ID | EU FP7 Network of Excellence |
Organisation | University of Southampton |
Sector | Academic/University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 09/2009 |
End | 08/2013 |