WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / WoS Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7150

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Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Citation - Scopus: 2
    Temperature-Dependent Spectral Properties of Hexagonal Boron Nitride Color Centers
    (Amer Chemical Soc, 2025) Ari, Ozan; Polat, Nahit; Firat, Volkan; Cakir, Ozgur; Ates, Serkan
    Color centers in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) are emerging as a mature platform for single-photon sources in quantum technology applications. In this study, we investigate the temperature-dependent spectral properties of a single defect in hBN to understand the dominant dephasing mechanisms due to phonons. We observe a sharp zero-phonon line (ZPL) emission accompanied by Stokes and anti-Stokes optical phonon sidebands assisted by the Raman-active low-energy (approximate to 6.5 meV) interlayer shear mode of hBN. The shape of the spectral lines around the ZPL is measured down to 78 K, at which the line width of the ZPL is measured as 211 mu eV. Using a quadratic electron-phonon interaction, the temperature-dependent broadening and the lineshift of the ZPL are found to follow a temperature dependence of T + T 5 and T + T 3, respectively. Furthermore, the temperature-dependent line shape around the ZPL at low-temperature conditions is modeled with a linear electron-phonon coupling theory, which results in a 0 K Debye-Waller factor of the ZPL emission as 0.59. Our results provide insights into the underlying mechanisms of electron-phonon coupling in hBN, which is critical to enhance their potential for applications in quantum technologies.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Citation - Scopus: 1
    Hyperspectral Imaging of Exciton Polaritons in Optical Microcavities
    (Amer Chemical Soc, 2024) Polat, Nahit; Yakar, Ozan; O''zdemir, Sahin K.; Balci, Sinan
    Photons can be confined in optical microcavities both spectrally and spatially, which allows us to study the light-matter interaction in both weak and strong coupling regimes. While the former is identified by the Purcell factor, which quantifies the suppression or enhancement of the spontaneous emission rate of the quantum emitters coupled to the cavity modes, the latter is identified by the formation of hybrid photon-matter modes called exciton polaritons and thus represents an avoided crossing in the spectra. Until now, various imaging and spectroscopic techniques have been extensively used to study exciton polariton formation in optical microcavities, and the coupling between excitons and photons has been statically and dynamically tuned. Herein, we demonstrate the hyperspectral imaging of exciton polaritons in optical microcavities. Two thin metal films acting as reflectors and a polymer matrix containing a collection of quantum emitters form a hybrid system for polariton imaging. We show a strong exciton-photon interaction between photons confined in the microcavity and Frenkel excitons of dye molecules placed inside the optical microcavity. We find that exciton polaritons can be imaged and spatially mapped in the optical microcavity by using hyperspectral imaging in the visible region. We envision that our findings will help us to understand exciton polariton formation in the spectral and spatial domains at the same time across different coupling regimes.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 17
    Citation - Scopus: 19
    Strong Coupling of Carbon Quantum Dots in Liquid Crystals
    (American Chemical Society, 2022) Sarısözen, Sema; Polat, Nahit; Mert Balcı, Fadime; Güvenç, Çetin Meriç; Kocabaş, Çoşkun; Yağlıoğlu, Halime Gül; Balcı, Sinan
    Carbon quantum dots (CDs) have recently received a tremendous amount of interest owing to their attractive optical properties. However, CDs have broad absorption and emission spectra limiting their application ranges. We herein, for the first time, show synthesis of water-soluble red emissive CDs with a very narrow line width (∼75 meV) spectral absorbance and hence demonstrate strong coupling of CDs and plasmon polaritons in liquid crystalline mesophases. The excited state dynamics of CDs has been studied by ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy, and CDs display very stable and strong photoluminescence emission with a quantum yield of 35.4% and a lifetime of ∼2 ns. More importantly, we compare J-aggregate dyes with CDs in terms of their absorption line width, photostability, and ability to do strong coupling, and we conclude that highly fluorescent CDs have a bright future in the mixed light-matter states for emerging applications in future quantum technologies.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 13
    Citation - Scopus: 14
    Strong Plasmon-Exciton Coupling in Colloidal Halide Perovskite Nanocrystals Near a Metal Film
    (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2020) Güvenç, Çetin Meriç; Polat, Nahit; Balcı, Sinan
    All inorganic colloidal halide perovskite nanoplatelets and nanowires are highly anisotropic shaped semiconductor nanocrystals with highly tunable optical properties in the visible spectrum. These nanocrystals have large exciton binding energies and high oscillator strengths due to their strongly quantum confined natures. The optical properties of the halide perovskites are tunable by variation of halide composition and morphology of the nanocrystals. We herein demonstrate that colloidal perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) placed in close proximity to chemically functionalized metal films show mixed plasmon-exciton formation, plexciton formation, in the strong coupling regime. The optical properties of all-inorganic lead halide perovskite NCs were controlled by colloidally synthesizing NCs with different morphologies such as nanowires and nanoplatelets or by controlling the composition of the halides in the NCs. The experimentally observed Rabi splitting energies are around 90 meV, 70 meV, and 55 meV for CsPbI3 nanoplatelets, CsPbI3 nanowires, and CsPb(Br/I)(3) nanoplatelets, respectively. In addition, the numerical simulations are in good agreement with the experimentally obtained data. The results show that colloidal all-inorganic halide perovskite NCs are promising and strong candidates for studying light-matter interaction at nanoscale dimension.