Polaritonic Chern insulators in monolayer semiconductors

ORAL

Abstract

Systems with strong light-matter interaction opens up new avenues for studying topological phases of matter. Examples include exciton-polaritons, mixed light-matter quasiparticles, where the topology of the polaritonic band structure arises from the collective coupling between matter wave and optical fields strongly confined in periodic dielectric structures. Distinct from light-matter interaction in a uniform environment, the spatially varying nature of the optical fields leads to a fundamental modification of the well-known optical selection rules, which were derived under the plane wave approximation. Here we identify polaritonic Chern insulators by coupling valley excitons in transition metal dichalcogenides to photonic Bloch modes in a dielectric photonic crystal slab. We show that polaritonic Dirac points, which are markers for topological phase transition points, can be constructed from the collective coupling between valley excitons and photonic Dirac cones in the presence of both time-reversal and inversion symmetries. Lifting exciton valley degeneracy by breaking time-reversal symmetry leads to gapped polaritonic bands with non-zero Chern numbers. Through numerical simulations, we predict polaritonic chiral edge states residing inside the topological gaps.

*This research was enabled in part by support provided by Westgrid and Compute Canada. This work was partly supported by the National Science Foundation through the University of Pennsylvania Materials Research Science and Engineering Center DMR-1720530, the US Office of Naval Research (ONR) Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) grant N00014-20-1-2325 on Robust Photonic Materials with High-Order Topological Protection and grant N00014-21-1-2703, the Department of Energy under grant DE-FG02-84ER45118.

Publication: arXiv:2206.08456

Presenters

  • Li He

    • University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Li He

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Jingda Wu

    • University of British Columbia
  • Jicheng Jin

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Eugene J Mele

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Bo Zhen

    • University of Pennsylvania