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The new quasiparticle, described in the February 26th 2014, issue of Nature and featured on the journal’s cover, is a microscopic complex of electrons and holes in a new, unpaired arrangement.


The researchers call this a ‘quantum droplet’ because it has quantum characteristics such as well-ordered energy levels, but also has some of the characteristics of a liquid. It can have ripples, for example. It differs from a familiar liquid like water because the quantum droplet has a finite size, beyond which the association between electrons and holes disappears.


Although its lifetime is only a fleeting 25 picoseconds (trillionths of a second), the quantum droplet is stable enough for research on how light interacts with specialised forms of matter.


“Electron-hole droplets are known in semiconductors, but they usually contain thousands to millions of electrons and holes,” says JILA physicist Steven Cundiff, who studies the properties of cutting-edge lasers and what they reveal about matter. “Here we are talking about droplets with around five electrons and five holes.”


“Regarding practical benefits, nobody is going to build a quantum droplet widget. But this does have indirect benefits in terms of improving our understanding of how electrons interact in various situations, including in optoelectronic devices,” he continues.


The JILA team created the new quasiparticle by exciting GaAs with an ultrafast red laser emitting about 100 million pulses per second. The pulses initially form excitons, which are known to travel around in semiconductors.


As laser pulse intensity increases, more electron-hole pairs are created, with quantum droplets developing when the exciton density reaches a certain level. At that point, the pairing disappears and a few electrons take up positions relative to a given hole. The negatively charged electrons and positively charged holes create a neutral droplet. The droplets are like bubbles held together briefly by pressure from the surrounding plasma.


Artist’s conception of microscopic ‘quantum droplet’ discovered by JILA physicists in GaAs excited by an ultrafast red laser pulse. Each droplet consists of electrons and holes (representing absent electrons) arranged in a liquid-like pattern of rings. The surrounding area is plasma. The discovery adds to understanding of how electrons interact in optoelectronic devices (Credit: Baxley/JILA)


JILA’s experimental data on energy levels of individual droplet rings agreed with theoretical calculations by co- authors at the University of Marburg in Germany. JILA researchers found they could tap into each energy level by tailoring the quantum properties of the laser pulses to match the particle correlations within the droplets.


The droplets seem stable enough for future systematic studies on interactions between light and highly correlated states of matter. In addition, quasiparticles, in general, can have exotic properties not found in their constituent parts, and thus, can play a role in controlling the behaviour of larger systems and devices.


JILA is a joint institute of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and University of Colorado Boulder. Cundiff is a NIST physicist. The JILA research is supported by the National Science Foundation, NIST and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.


This work has been described in detail in the paper, “Quantum droplets of electrons and holes,” by A.E. Almand-Hunter et al in Nature, 471 - 475, published online on February 26th, 2014.doi:10.1038/nature12994


This article has been adapted from a story by Laura Ost at NIST.


A cavity that renders an optical nanocavity


Researchers say an optical ‘nanocavity’ could boost light absorption in semiconductors and improve solar cells, cameras and more


Scientists at the University of Buffalo say a new advancement could lead to major breakthroughs in energy-harvesting and conversion, security and other areas that will benefit humankind. Associated with unhappy visits to the dentist, “cavity” means something else in the branch of physics known as optics. Put simply, an optical cavity is an arrangement of mirrors that allows beams of light to circulate in closed paths. These cavities help us build things like lasers and optical fibre used for communications. Now, an international research team


March 2014 www.compoundsemiconductor.net 157


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