2021 journal article

High-temperature superfluorescence in methyl ammonium lead iodide

Nature Photonics, 6.

By: G. Findik n, M. Biliroglu n, D. Seyitliyev n, J. Mendes n, A. Barrette n, H. Ardekani n, L. Lei n, Q. Dong n, F. So n, K. Gundogdu n

Source: ORCID
Added: June 22, 2021

Light–matter interactions can create and manipulate collective many-body phases in solids1–3, which are promising for the realization of emerging quantum applications. However, in most cases, these collective quantum states are fragile, with a short decoherence and dephasing time, limiting their existence to precision tailored structures under delicate conditions such as cryogenic temperatures and/or high magnetic fields. In this work, we discovered that the archetypal hybrid perovskite, MAPbI3 thin film, exhibits such a collective coherent quantum many-body phase, namely superfluorescence, at 78 K and above. Pulsed laser excitation first creates a population of high-energy electron–hole pairs, which quickly relax to lower energy domains and then develop a macroscopic quantum coherence through spontaneous synchronization. The excitation fluence dependence of the spectroscopic features and the population kinetics in such films unambiguously confirm all the well-known characteristics of superfluorescence. These results show that the creation and manipulation of collective coherent states in hybrid perovskites can be used as the basic building blocks for quantum applications4,5. A collective coherent quantum many-body phase, namely superfluorescence, is observed in CH3NH3PbI3 at 78 K. The excitation fluence dependence of the spectroscopic features and the population kinetics confirm all its well-known characteristics.