Plasmon-Exciton-Polariton Lasing
Mohammad Ramezani, Alexei Halpin, Antonio I. Fern\'andez-Dom\'inguez,, Johannes Feist, Said Rahimzadeh-Kalaleh Rodriguez, Francisco J. Garcia-Vidal, and Jaime G\'omez-Rivas

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates room-temperature plasmon-exciton-polariton lasing using metallic nanoparticle arrays, achieving low threshold emission through strong light-matter coupling and stimulated scattering in an open cavity system.
Contribution
It reports the first observation of PEP lasing via a dark plasmonic mode in a nanoparticle array at room temperature, with reduced threshold power linked to increased light-matter coupling.
Findings
Lasing achieved through dark plasmonic modes in nanoparticle arrays.
Threshold power decreases with stronger light-matter coupling.
Lasing occurs despite reduced quantum efficiency of the active material.
Abstract
Metallic nanostructures provide a toolkit for the generation of coherent light below the diffraction limit. Plasmonic based lasing relies on the population inversion of emitters (such as organic fluorophores) along with feedback provided by plasmonic resonances. In this regime, known as weak light matter coupling, the radiative characteristics of the system can be described by the Purcell effect. Strong light matter coupling between the molecular excitons and electromagnetic field generated by the plasmonic structures leads to the formation of hybrid quasi-particles known as plasmon exciton polaritons (PEPs). Due to the bosonic character of these quasi particles, exciton polariton condensation can lead to laser-like emission at much lower threshold powers than in conventional photon lasers. Here, we observe PEP lasing through a dark plasmonic mode in an array of metallic nanoparticles…
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