Exploring the role of disorder on organic exciton-polaritons

ORAL

Abstract

Exciton polaritons, arising from the interaction of electronic transitions with confined electromagnetic fields, have emerged as a powerful tool to manipulate the properties of organic materials. However, standard experimental and theoretical approaches overlook the significant energetic disorder present in most materials now studied. Using the conjugated polymer P3HT as a model platform, we systematically tune the degree of energetic disorder and observe a corresponding redistribution of photonic character within the polariton manifold. Based on these subtle spectral features, we develop a more generalized approach to describe strong light-matter coupling in disordered systems that captures the key spectroscopic observables and provides a description of the rich manifold of states intermediate between bright and dark. Applied to a wide range of organic systems, our method challenges prevailing notions about ultrastrong coupling and whether it can be achieved with broad, disordered absorbers.

* This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, CPIMS Program under Early Career Research Program (Award No. DE-SC0021941).

Publication: arXiv:2309.13178

Presenters

  • Aleesha George

    Cornell University

Authors

  • Andrew Musser

    Cornell University

  • Aleesha George

    Cornell University

  • Trevor Geraghty

    Ohio State University

  • Zahra Kelsey

    Cornell University

  • Soham Mukherjee

    Cornell University

  • Gloria Davidova

    Cornell University

  • Woojae Kim

    Yonsei University