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ZnO as a material mostly adapted for the realization of room-temperature polariton lasers

Marian Zamfirescu, Alexey Kavokin, Bernard Gil, Guillaume Malpuech, and Mikhail Kaliteevski
Phys. Rev. B 65, 161205(R) – Published 15 April 2002
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Abstract

Wannier-Mott excitons in the wurzite-type semiconductor material ZnO are stable at room temperature, have an extremely large oscillator strength, and emit blue light. This makes ZnO an excellent potential candidate for the fabrication of room-temperature lasers where the coherent light amplification is ruled by the fascinating mechanism of the Bose condensation of the exciton polaritons. We report the direct optical measurement of the exciton oscillator strength f in ZnO. The longitudinal transverse splitting of the exciton resonances Γ5(B) and Γ1(C) are found to achieve record values of 5 and 7 meV, respectively, that, is two orders of magnitude larger than in GaAs. Second, we propose a model ZnO-based microcavity structure that is found to be the most adapted structure for the observation of the polariton laser effect. We thus can compute the phase diagram of the lasing regimes. A record value of the threshold power of 2 mW per device (at power density of 3000W/cm2) at room temperature is found for the model laser structure.

  • Received 26 November 2001

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.65.161205

©2002 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Marian Zamfirescu1, Alexey Kavokin1, Bernard Gil2, Guillaume Malpuech1,3, and Mikhail Kaliteevski2

  • 1LASMEA, UMR 6602 du CNRS, Universit Blaise Pascal–Clermont-Ferrand II, 63177 Aubire Cedex, France
  • 2GES, CNRS/Universit Montpellier II, Case courrier 074, 34095 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
  • 3Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, United Kingdom

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Vol. 65, Iss. 16 — 15 April 2002

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