Solid State Electrically Injected Exciton-Polariton Laser
Abstract
Inversionless ultralow threshold coherent emission, or polariton lasing, can be obtained by spontaneous radiative recombination from a degenerate polariton condensate with nonresonant excitation. Such excitation has, hitherto, been provided by an optical source. Coherent emission from a GaAs-based quantum well microcavity diode with electrical injection is observed here. This is achieved by a combination of modulation doping of the wells, to invoke polariton-electron scattering, and an applied magnetic field in the Faraday geometry to enhance the exciton-polariton saturation density. These measures help to overcome the relaxation bottleneck and to form a macroscopic and degenerate condensate as evidenced by angle-resolved luminescence, light-current characteristics, spatial coherence, and output polarization. The experiments were performed at 30 K with an applied field of 7 T.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Letters
- Pub Date:
- May 2013
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.206403
- Bibcode:
- 2013PhRvL.110t6403B
- Keywords:
-
- 71.36.+c;
- 42.55.Sa;
- 78.45.+h;
- 85.35.Be;
- Polaritons;
- Microcavity and microdisk lasers;
- Stimulated emission;
- Quantum well devices