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Physique de l'exciton, du photon et du spin
(40) Production(s) de l'année 2024
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Near-field radiative heat transfer between shifted graphene gratings
Auteur(s): Luo M., Jeyar Y., Guizal B., Antezza M.
(Article) Publié:
Physical Review B, vol. 109 p.195431 (2024)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-04608436_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2401.14357
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.109.195431
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: We examine the near-field radiative heat transfer between finite-thickness planar fused silica slabs covered with graphene gratings, through the utilization of the Fourier modal method augmented with local basis functions (FMM-LBF), with focus on the lateral shift effect. To do so, we propose and validate a minor modification of the FMM-LBF theory to account for the lateral shift. This approach goes far beyond the effective medium approximation because this latter cannot account for the lateral shift. We show that the heat flux can exhibit significant oscillations with the lateral shift and, at short separation, it can experience up to a 60%-70% reduction compared to the aligned case. Such a lateral shift effect is found to be sensitive to the geometric factor d/D (separation distance to grating period ratio). When d/D>1 (realized through large separation or small grating period), the two graphene gratings see each other as an effective whole rather than in detail, and thus the lateral shift effect on heat transfer becomes less important. Therefore, we can clearly distinguish two asymptotic regimes for radiative heat transfer: the LSE (Lateral Shift Effect) regime, where a significant lateral shift effect is observed, and the non-LSE regime, where this effect is negligible. Furthermore, regardless of the lateral shift, the radiative heat flux shows a non-monotonic dependence on the graphene chemical potential. That is, we can get an optimal radiative heat flux (peaking at about 0.3eV chemical potential) by in situ modulating the chemical potential. This work has the potential to unveil new avenues for harnessing the lateral shift effect on radiative heat transfer in graphene-based nanodevices.
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Soliton formation in an exciton-polariton condensate at a bound state in the continuum
Auteur(s): Septembre I., Foudjo I., Develay V., Guillet T., Bouchoule S., Zúñiga-Pérez J., Solnyshkov D., Malpuech G.
(Article) Publié:
Physical Review B, vol. 109 p.205302 (2024)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-04587561_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2401.06589
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.109.205302
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: Bound states in the continuum (BICs) are of special interest in photonics due to their theoretically infinite radiative lifetime. In this work, we take a specific example (a structure composed of GaN and a TiO2 photonic crystal slab), showcasing how the interactions affect BICs. The photonic BIC hosted by the photonic crystal slab couples with the excitons of GaN to form a polaritonic BIC with a negative mass. This allows condensation to be reached with a low threshold in a structure suitable for electrical injection, paving the way for room-temperature polariton microdevices. We study in detail how the repulsive interaction between exciton-polaritons affects the condensate distribution in reciprocal space and, consequently, the condensate's overlap with the BIC resonance and, therefore, the condensate lifetime. We study an intrinsic contribution related to the formation of a bright soliton and the extrinsic contribution related to the interaction with an excitonic reservoir induced by spatially focused nonresonant pumping. We then study the peculiar dynamics of the condensation process in a BIC state for interacting particles using Boltzmann equations and hybrid Boltzmann–Gross-Pitaevskii equations. We find optimal conditions allowing one to benefit from the long lifetime of the BIC for polariton condensation in a real structure.
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Optimization of highly circularly polarized thermal radiation in α-MoO$_3$/β-Ga$_2$O$_3$ twisted layers
Auteur(s): Centini M., Yang Chiyu, Larciprete Maria Cristina, Antezza M., Zhang Z.
(Article) Publié:
Journal Of Quantitative Spectroscopy And Radiative Transfer, vol. 323 p.109051 (2024)
Ref HAL: hal-04608450_v1
DOI: 10.1016/j.jqsrt.2024.109051
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: We investigate a bi-layer scheme for circularly polarized infrared thermal radiation. Our approach takes advantage of the strong anisotropy of low-symmetry materials such as β-Ga2O$_3$ and α-MoO$_3$. We numerically report narrow-band, high degree of circular polarization (over 0.85), thermal radiation at two typical emission frequencies related to the excitation of β-Ga$_2$O$_3$ optical phonons. Optimization of the degree of circular polarization is achieved by a proper relative tilt of the crystal axes between the two layers. Our simple but effective scheme could set the basis for a new class of lithography-free thermal sources for IR bio-sensing.
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Quantum thermodynamics of boundary time-crystals
Auteur(s): Carollo Federico, Lesanovsky Igor, Antezza M., De Chiara G.
(Article) Publié:
Quantum Science And Technology, vol. 9 p.035024 (2024)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-04608461_v1
DOI: 10.1088/2058-9565/ad3f42
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: Time-translation symmetry breaking is a mechanism for the emergence of non-stationary many-body phases, so-called time-crystals, in Markovian open quantum systems. Dynamical aspects of time-crystals have been extensively explored over the recent years. However, much less is known about their thermodynamic properties, also due to the intrinsic nonequilibrium nature of these phases. Here, we consider the paradigmatic boundary time-crystal system, in a finite-temperature environment, and demonstrate the persistence of the time-crystalline phase at any temperature. Furthermore, we analyze thermodynamic aspects of the model investigating, in particular, heat currents, power exchange and irreversible entropy production. Our work sheds light on the thermodynamic cost of sustaining nonequilibrium time-crystalline phases and provides a framework for characterizing time-crystals as possible resources for, e.g. quantum sensing. Our results may be verified in experiments, for example with trapped ions or superconducting circuits, since we connect thermodynamic quantities with mean value and covariance of collective (magnetization) operators.
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Spontaneous breaking of time-reversal symmetry and time-crystal states in chiral atomic systems
Auteur(s): Antezza M.
(Séminaires)
Università di Roma - La Sapienza (Rome, IT), 2024-04-10
Résumé: We will present a theoretical study of the interaction between an atom characterized by a degenerate ground state and a reciprocal environment, such as a semiconductor nanoparticle, without the presence of external bias. We show that the combined influence of the electron's intrinsic spin magnetic moment on the environment and the chiral atomic dipolar transitions may lead to either the spontaneous breaking of time-reversal symmetry or the emergence of time-crystal-like states with remarkably long relaxation times. The different behavior is ruled by the handedness of the precession motion of the atom's spin vector, which is induced by virtual chiral-dipolar transitions. Specifically, when the relative orientation of the precession angular velocity and the electron spin vector is as in a spinning top, the system manifests time-crystal-like states. Conversely, with the opposite relative orientation, the system experiences spontaneous symmetry breaking of time reversal symmetry. Our findings introduce a mechanism for the spontaneous breaking of time-reversal symmetry in atomic systems, and unveil an exciting opportunity to engineer a nonreciprocal response at the nanoscale, exclusively driven by the quantum vacuum fluctuations.
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Nuclear spin-spin interactions in CdTe probed by zero and ultra-low-field optically detected NMR
Auteur(s): Litvyak V. M., Bazhin P., André Régis, Vladimirova M., Kavokin K. V.
(Document sans référence bibliographique) 2024-03-26Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-04525413_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2403.17593
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is particularly relevant for studies of internuclear spin coupling at zero and ultra-low fields (ZULF), where spin-spin interactions dominate over Zeeman ones. Here we report on ZULF NMR in CdTe. In this semiconductor all magnetic isotopes have spin $I = 1/2$, so that internuclear interactions are never overshadowed by quadrupole effects. Our experiments rely on warm-up spectroscopy, a technique that combines optical pumping, additional cooling via adiabatic demagnetisation, and detection of the oscillating magnetic field-induced warm-up of the nuclear spin system via Hanle effect. We show that NMR spectra exhibit a rich fine structure, consistent with the low abundance of magnetic isotopes in CdTe, their zero quadrupole moments, as well as direct and indirect interactions between them. A model assuming that the electromagnetic radiation is absorbed by nuclear spin clusters composed of up to 5 magnetic isotopes allows us to reproduce the shape of a major part of the measured spectra.
Commentaires: 9 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables
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Graphene conductivity: Kubo model versus QFT-based model
Auteur(s): Rodriguez-Lopez Pablo, Antezza M.
(Document sans référence bibliographique) 2024-05-05Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-04523215_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2403.02279
Ref INSPIRE: 2765291
DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2403.02279
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: We compare three available models of graphene conductivity: a non-local Kubo model, a local model derived by Fialkovsky, and finally a non-local Quantum Field Theory based (QFT-b) model. The first two models are extensively used in the nanophotonic community. All these models are not ab-initio since they contain phenomenological parameters (like chemical potential and/or mass gap parameters), and are supposed to provide coherent results since they are derived from the same starting Hamiltonian. While we confirm that the local model is a proper limit of the non-local Kubo model, we find some inconsistencies in the QFT-b model as derived and used in literature. In particular, differently from the Kubo model, the QFT-b model does not satisfy the required Gauge invariance, and as a consequence it shows a plasma-like behavior for the interband transversal conductivity at low frequencies instead of the expected behavior (an almost constant conductivity as a function of frequency $\omega$ with a gap for frequencies $\hbar\omega < \sqrt{(\hbar v_{F}q)^{2} + 4m^{2}}$). The inconsistencies of QFT-b model predictions are due to a non-correct regularization-scheme which allows for the gauge invariance violation. We show how to correctly regularize the QFT-b model in order to satisfy the gauge invariance and, once also losses are correctly included, we show that the Kubo and QFT-b model exactly coincide. Our finding can be of relevant interest for both theory predictions and experimental tests in both the nanophotonic and Casimir effect communities.
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