Room temperature superfluorescence from a single nanocuboid
ORAL
Abstract
Single-photon superradiance arises when a collection of identical emitters are spatially separated by distances much less than the wavelength of the light they emit and results in the formation of a superradiant state that spontaneously emits light with a rate that scales linearly with the number of emitters. This collective phenomena has only been demonstrated in a few nanomaterial systems, none of which have used quasi-2D nanoplatelets as the emitter. By combining molecular dynamics, atomistic electronic structure calculations, and model Hamiltonians methods, we show that quasi-2D nanoplatelets oriented along each face of a “nanocuboid” can serve as the (nearly) identical emitters required to observe both superradiant and subradiant phenomena. And we demonstrate single-photon superfluorescence via single-particle time-resolved photoluminescence measurements at room temperature. These findings open the door to ultrafast single-photon emitters and may provide an avenue to entangled multi-photon states via superradiant cascades.
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Presenters
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John Philbin
Harvard University
Authors
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John Philbin
Harvard University
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Joseph Kelly
Stanford University
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Lintao Peng
Argonne National Laboratory
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Igor Coropceanu
University of Chicago
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Dmitri Talapin
University of Chicago
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Eran Rabani
University of California, Berkeley
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Xuedan Ma
Argonne National Laboratory, Center for Nanoscale Materials, Argonne National Laboratory
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Prineha Narang
Harvard University, SEAS, Harvard University, John A. Paulson School of Engineering & Applied Science, Harvard University, Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Physics, Harvard University, John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University