Exciton polariton condensation from bound states in the continuum at room temperature.
Xianxin WuShuai ZhangJiepeng SongXinyi DengWenna DuXin ZengYuyang ZhangZhiyong ZhangYuzhong ChenYubin WangChuanxiu JiangYangguang ZhongBo WuZhuoya ZhuYin LiangQing ZhangQihua XiongXin-Feng LiuPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Exciton-polaritons (polaritons) resulting from the strong exciton-photon interaction stimulates the development of novel low-threshold coherent light sources to circumvent the ever-increasing energy demands of optical communications 1-3 . Polaritons from bound states in the continuum (BICs) are promising for Bose-Einstein condensation owing to their theoretically infinite quality factors, which provide prolonged lifetimes and benefit the polariton accumulations 4-7 . However, BIC polariton condensation remains limited to cryogenic temperatures ascribed to the small exciton binding energies of conventional material platforms. Herein, we demonstrated room-temperature BIC polariton condensation in perovskite photonic crystal lattices. BIC polariton condensation was demonstrated at the vicinity of the saddle point of polariton dispersion that generates directional vortex beam emission with long-range coherence. We also explore the peculiar switching effect among the miniaturized BIC polariton modes through effective polariton-polariton scattering. Our work paves the way for the practical implementation of BIC polariton condensates for integrated photonic and topological circuits.