Intrinsically Ultrastrong Plasmon-Exciton Interactions in Crystallized Films of Carbon Nanotubes
ORAL
Abstract
We show that carbon nanotubes can be crystallized into chip-scale, two-dimensionally ordered films and that this new material enables intrinsically ultrastrong emitter-cavity interactions: rather than interacting with external cavities, nanotube excitons couple to the near-infrared plasmon resonances of the nanotubes themselves [1]. Our polycrystalline nanotube films have a hexagonal crystal structure, ~25 nm domains, and a 1.74 nm lattice constant. With this extremely high nanotube density and nearly ideal plasmon-exciton spatial overlap, plasmon-exciton coupling strengths reach 0.5 eV, which is 75% of the bare exciton energy and a near record for room-temperature ultrastrong coupling. Crystallized nanotube films provide a compelling foundation for high-ampacity conductors, low-power optical switches, and tunable optical antennas.
[1] Ho et al, Proc. Natl. Ac. Sci., accepted (2018)
[1] Ho et al, Proc. Natl. Ac. Sci., accepted (2018)
*This work was funded by IBM and the Postdoctoral Research Abroad Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology Taiwan (NSC 106-2917-I-564-012).
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Presenters
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Abram Falk
- IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center