Fermi-edge exciton-polaritons in doped semiconductor microcavities with finite hole mass

Dimitri Pimenov, Jan von Delft, Leonid Glazman, and Moshe Goldstein
Phys. Rev. B 96, 155310 – Published 26 October 2017

Abstract

The coupling between a 2D semiconductor quantum well and an optical cavity gives rise to combined light-matter excitations, the exciton-polaritons. These were usually measured when the conduction band is empty, making the single polariton physics a simple single-body problem. The situation is dramatically different in the presence of a finite conduction-band population, where the creation or annihilation of a single exciton involves a many-body shakeup of the Fermi sea. Recent experiments in this regime revealed a strong modification of the exciton-polariton spectrum. Previous theoretical studies concerned with nonzero Fermi energy mostly relied on the approximation of an immobile valence-band hole with infinite mass, which is appropriate for low-mobility samples only; for high-mobility samples, one needs to consider a mobile hole with large but finite mass. To bridge this gap, we present an analytical diagrammatic approach and tackle a model with short-ranged (screened) electron-hole interaction, studying it in two complementary regimes. We find that the finite hole mass has opposite effects on the exciton-polariton spectra in the two regimes: in the first, where the Fermi energy is much smaller than the exciton binding energy, excitonic features are enhanced by the finite mass. In the second regime, where the Fermi energy is much larger than the exciton binding energy, finite mass effects cut off the excitonic features in the polariton spectra, in qualitative agreement with recent experiments.

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  • Received 28 July 2017
  • Revised 4 October 2017

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.96.155310

©2017 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Dimitri Pimenov* and Jan von Delft

  • Arnold Sommerfeld Center for Theoretical Physics, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, 80333 Munich, Germany

Leonid Glazman

  • Departments of Physics, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA

Moshe Goldstein

  • Raymond and Beverly Sackler School of Physics and Astronomy, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel

  • *D.Pimenov@physik.lmu.de

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Issue

Vol. 96, Iss. 15 — 15 October 2017

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