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Halide perovskites enable polaritonic XY spin Hamiltonian at room temperature.

Renjie TaoKai PengLouis HaeberléQuanwei LiDafei JinGraham R FlemingStephane Kena CohenXiang ZhangWei Bao
Published in: Nature materials (2022)
Exciton polaritons, the part-light and part-matter quasiparticles in semiconductor optical cavities, are promising for exploring Bose-Einstein condensation, non-equilibrium many-body physics and analogue simulation at elevated temperatures. However, a room-temperature polaritonic platform on par with the GaAs quantum wells grown by molecular beam epitaxy at low temperatures remains elusive. The operation of such a platform calls for long-lifetime, strongly interacting excitons in a stringent material system with large yet nanoscale-thin geometry and homogeneous properties. Here, we address this challenge by adopting a method based on the solution synthesis of excitonic halide perovskites grown under nanoconfinement. Such nanoconfinement growth facilitates the synthesis of smooth and homogeneous single-crystalline large crystals enabling the demonstration of XY Hamiltonian lattices with sizes up to 10 × 10. With this demonstration, we further establish perovskites as a promising platform for room temperature polaritonic physics and pave the way for the realization of robust mode-disorder-free polaritonic devices at room temperature.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • solar cells
  • ionic liquid
  • high throughput
  • molecular dynamics
  • energy transfer
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • high speed
  • atomic force microscopy
  • plant growth
  • perovskite solar cells
  • monte carlo