4.8 Article

Steering Room-Temperature Plexcitonic Strong Coupling: A Diexcitonic Perspective

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 21, Issue 21, Pages 8979-8986

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c02248

Keywords

Nano-optics; quantum plasmonics; plexcitonic strong coupling; full-quantum theory

Funding

  1. Key-Area Research and Development Program of Guangdong Province [2018B30329001]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11974437, 91750207]
  3. Guangdong Special Support Program [2017TQ04C487, 2019JC0X397]
  4. Guangdong Natural Science Foundation [2020A0505140004]
  5. Open Fund of IPOC (BUPT) [IPOC2019A003]
  6. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, Sun Yat-sen University [20lgzd30]
  7. National Research Foundation Singapore [QEP-SF1]
  8. A*STAR Career Development Award [SC23/21-8007EP]
  9. National Research Foundation (NRF) Singapore [NRF2017NRF-NSFC002-015]
  10. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [NRF2017NRF-NSFC002-015]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study reports a room-temperature diexcitonic strong coupling (DiSC) nanosystem in which the excitons of a transition metal dichalcogenide monolayer and dye molecules are both strongly coupled to a single Au nanocube. The results show that coherent information exchange can be observed even when the exciton energy detuning is about five times larger than the respective line widths. The strong coupling behaviors in such a DiSC nanosystem can be manipulated by tuning the plasmon resonant energies and the coupling strengths, opening up a paradigm of controlling plasmon-assisted coherent energy transfer.
Plexcitonic strong coupling between a plasmonpolariton and a quantum emitter empowers ultrafast quantum manipulations in the nanoscale under ambient conditions. The main body of previous studies deals with homogeneous quantum emitters. To enable multiqubit states for future quantum computing and network, the strong coupling involving two excitons of the same material but different resonant energies has been investigated and observed primarily at very low temperature. Here, we report a room-temperature diexcitonic strong coupling (DiSC) nanosystem in which the excitons of a transition metal dichalcogenide monolayer and dye molecules are both strongly coupled to a single Au nanocube. Coherent information exchange in this DiSC nanosystem could be observed even when exciton energy detuning is about five times larger than the respective line widths. The strong coupling behaviors in such a DiSC nanosystem can be manipulated by tuning the plasmon resonant energies and the coupling strengths, opening up a paradigm of controlling plasmon-assisted coherent energy transfer.

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