Kristjan Greenewald, Anming Gu, et al.
TMLR
A central challenge for advancing polariton-based circuits is the controlled and scalable coupling of individual condensates. Existing approaches based on etched or epitaxially grown microcavities are fabrication-intensive and restrict in-plane coupling. To overcome these limitations, we introduce a lithographically defined silicon-based platform of high-contrast grating (HCG) microcavities with a ladder-type π-conjugated polymer. In this system, doublet cavities exhibit mode hybridization into bonding and antibonding states, where coupling is mediated across shared HCG mirrors. Extending the design to arrays, N-coupled condensates exhibit systematic red-shifts of the condensate energy, due to delocalization, and a progressive threshold reduction, consistent with extended binding modes. Our experimental results are quantitatively supported by transition-matrix multi-scattering simulations, together with tight-binding modelling. First-order coherence measurements using Michelson interferometry confirm the existence of spatially extended condensates with exponentially decaying temporal coherence. Altogether, these results establish a scalable route toward integrated polariton devices and quantum photonic networks.
Kristjan Greenewald, Anming Gu, et al.
TMLR
Jenna M. Reinen, Pablo Polosecki, et al.
Schizophrenia
Vasileios Kalantzis, Georgios Kollias, et al.
ICML 2021
Aldo Guzmán-Sáenz
APMC 2024