Observation of tunable charged exciton polaritons in hybrid monolayer WS2 - plasmonic nanoantenna system

Abstract

Formation of dressed light-matter states in optical structures, manifested as Rabi splitting of the eigen energies of a coupled system, is one of the key effects in quantum optics. In pursuing this regime with semiconductors, light is usually made to interact with excitons - electrically neutral quasiparticles of semiconductors, meanwhile interactions with charged three-particle states - trions - have received little attention. Here, we report on strong interaction between plasmons in silver nanoprisms and charged excitons - trions - in monolayer tungsten disulphide (WS2). We show that the plasmon-exciton interactions in this system can be efficiently tuned by controlling the charged versus neutral exciton contribution to the coupling process. In particular, we show that a stable trion state emerges and couples efficiently to the plasmon resonance at low temperature by forming three bright intermixed plasmon-exciton-trion polariton states. Our findings open up a possibility to exploit electrically charged trion polaritons - previously unexplored mixed states of light and matter in nanoscale hybrid plasmonic systems.

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