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Single-photon nonlinearity at room temperature
- Source :
- Nature
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- The recent progress in nanotechnology1,2 and single-molecule spectroscopy3–5 paves the way for emergent cost-effective organic quantum optical technologies with potential applications in useful devices operating at ambient conditions. We harness a π-conjugated ladder-type polymer strongly coupled to a microcavity forming hybrid light–matter states, so-called exciton-polaritons, to create exciton-polariton condensates with quantum fluid properties. Obeying Bose statistics, exciton-polaritons exhibit an extreme nonlinearity when undergoing bosonic stimulation6, which we have managed to trigger at the single-photon level, thereby providing an efficient way for all-optical ultrafast control over the macroscopic condensate wavefunction. Here, we utilize stable excitons dressed with high-energy molecular vibrations, allowing for single-photon nonlinear operation at ambient conditions. This opens new horizons for practical implementations like sub-picosecond switching, amplification and all-optical logic at the fundamental quantum limit. Nonlinearity induced by a single photon is desirable because it can drive power consumption of optical devices to their fundamental quantum limit, and is demonstrated here at room temperature.
- Subjects :
- Physics
Quantum fluid
Condensed Matter::Quantum Gases
Multidisciplinary
Photon
business.industry
Condensed Matter::Other
Exciton
Quantum limit
Physics::Optics
02 engineering and technology
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
01 natural sciences
7. Clean energy
law.invention
law
0103 physical sciences
Optoelectronics
010306 general physics
0210 nano-technology
Wave function
business
Ultrashort pulse
Quantum
Bose–Einstein condensate
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....639bed162b098e15673ae88f3c095a5a