Superabsorption in an organic microcavity: towards a quantum battery
J. Q. Quach, K. E. McGhee, L. Ganzer, D. M. Rouse, B. W. Lovett, E. M., Gauger, J. Keeling, G. Cerullo, D. G. Lidzey, T. Virgili

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates superabsorption in an organic microcavity, showing enhanced light absorption and energy storage capabilities at ultrafast timescales, with implications for quantum batteries and nanoscale energy technologies.
Contribution
The study experimentally realizes a quantum battery model with superextensive charging rates using ultrafast spectroscopy in a molecular dye microcavity.
Findings
Superextensive charging rates observed
Decoherence stabilizes energy storage
Agreement between experimental results and theoretical models
Abstract
The rate at which matter emits or absorbs light can be modified by its environment, as dramatically exemplified by the widely-studied phenomenon of superradiance. The reverse process, superabsorption, is harder to demonstrate due to the challenges of probing ultrafast processes, and has only been seen for small numbers of atoms. Its central idea - superextensive scaling of absorption meaning larger systems absorb faster - is also the key idea underpinning quantum batteries. Here we implement experimentally a paradigmatic model of a quantum battery, constructed of a microcavity enclosing a molecular dye. Ultrafast optical spectroscopy allows us to observe charging dynamics at femtosecond resolution to demonstrate superextensive charging rates and storage capacity, in agreement with our theoretical modelling. We find that decoherence plays an important role in stabilising energy storage.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
