Spin currents and superfluidity of microcavity polaritons

Lead Research Organisation: University of Southampton
Department Name: Sch of Physics and Astronomy

Abstract

The overall goal of the project is to detect experimentally exciton-polariton superfluids and spin currents in microcavities and to develop a full quantum theory of exciton-polariton superfluidity. The fingerprints of polariton superfluidity will be searched for in spatially- and directionally-resolved optical measure-ments with spectral, temporal and polarization-detection, with or without application of external magnetic fields, on improved quality strain free microcavity samples. We shall look for conventional and superfluid polariton spin currents in the regime of the optical spin Hall effect. We expect theoretically important dif-ferences between polariton and conventional superfluids caused by a peculiar dispersion and spin structure of exciton-polaritons. We aim to study theoretically and experimentally the polarization dynamics of both resonantly and non-resonantly excited polariton condensates to reveal the specifics of polariton superfluid-ity and search for new effects including the optical spin-Hall effect and the spin analogue of the Meissner effect.

Publications

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Kochereshko VP (2016) Lasing in Bose-Fermi mixtures. in Scientific reports

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Lagoudakis P (2014) Polariton condensates: Going soft. in Nature materials

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Maragkou M (2010) Longitudinal optical phonon assisted polariton laser in Applied Physics Letters

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Maragkou Maria (2011) Optical analogue of the spin Hall effect in a photonic cavity in OPTICS LETTERS

 
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 Electronics,Energy

URL http://www.hybrid.soton.ac.uk/
 
Description The research output has been published in high impact journals, presented as invited talks at international conference.
First Year Of Impact 2012
Sector Education
Impact Types Societal