Strong coupling between a topological insulator and a III-V heterostructure at terahertz frequency
D. Quang To, Zhengtianye Wang, Q. Dai Ho, Ruiqi Hu, Wilder Acuna,, Yongchen Liu, Garnett W. Bryant, Anderson Janotti, Joshua M.O. Zide,, Stephanie Law, Matthew F. Doty

TL;DR
This paper theoretically investigates strong coupling phenomena in a heterostructure combining a topological insulator and III-V materials at terahertz frequencies, revealing hybrid modes and key parameters influencing their observability.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical model demonstrating the formation of Dirac plasmon-phonon-ISBT polaritons and identifies material parameters critical for experimental realization of strong coupling.
Findings
Hybrid Dirac plasmon-phonon-ISBT polaritons form with spectral anti-crossings.
Coupling strength depends on doping, scattering rate, and spacer thickness.
Presence of a 2D hole gas shifts polariton frequencies and affects coupling.
Abstract
We probe theoretically the emergence of strong coupling in a system consisting of a topological insulator (TI) and a III-V heterostructure using a numerical approach based on the scattering matrix formalism. Specifically, we investigate the interactions between terahertz excitations in a structure composed of BiSe and GaAs materials. We find that the interaction between the BiSe layer and AlGaAs/GaAs quantum wells with intersubband transitions (ISBTs) in the terahertz frequency regime creates new hybrid modes, namely Dirac plasmon-phonon-ISBT polaritons. The formation of these hybrid modes results in anti-crossings (spectral mode splitting) whose magnitude is an indication of the strength of the coupling. By varying the structural parameters of the constituent materials, our numerical calculations reveal that the magnitude of splitting depends strongly on the…
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.
