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A hybrid organic-inorganic polariton LED.

Rahul JayaprakashKyriacos GeorgiouHarriet CoulthardAlexis AskitopoulosSai Kiran RajendranDavid M ColesAndrew J MusserJenny ClarkIfor D W SamuelGraham A TurnbullPavlos G LagoudakisDavid G Lidzey
Published in: Light, science & applications (2019)
Polaritons are quasi-particles composed of a superposition of excitons and photons that can be created within a strongly coupled optical microcavity. Here, we describe a structure in which a strongly coupled microcavity containing an organic semiconductor is coupled to a second microcavity containing a series of weakly coupled inorganic quantum wells. We show that optical hybridisation occurs between the optical modes of the two cavities, creating a delocalised polaritonic state. By electrically injecting electron-hole pairs into the inorganic quantum-well system, we are able to transfer energy between the cavities and populate organic-exciton polaritons. Our approach represents a new strategy to create highly efficient devices for emerging 'polaritonic' technologies.
Keyphrases
  • water soluble
  • highly efficient
  • high resolution
  • perovskite solar cells
  • high speed
  • molecular dynamics
  • energy transfer
  • mass spectrometry