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Dive into the research topics where Pavlos G. Lagoudakis is active.

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Featured researches published by Pavlos G. Lagoudakis.


Journal of Physics D | 2007

Current status of AlInN layers lattice-matched to GaN for photonics and electronics

R. Butté; J.-F. Carlin; E. Feltin; M. Gonschorek; Sylvain Nicolay; Gabriel Christmann; D. Simeonov; A. Castiglia; J. Dorsaz; H. J. Buehlmann; S. Christopoulos; G. Baldassarri Höger von Högersthal; A. J. D. Grundy; Mauro Mosca; C. Pinquier; M. A. Py; F. Demangeot; J. Frandon; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis; Jeremy J. Baumberg; N. Grandjean

We report on the current properties of Al1-x InxN (x approximate to 0.18) layers lattice- matched ( LM) to GaN and their specific use to realize nearly strain- free structures for photonic and electronic applications. Following a literature survey of the general properties of AlInN layers, structural and optical properties of thin state- of- the- art AlInN layers LM to GaN are described showing that despite improved structural properties these layers are still characterized by a typical background donor concentration of ( 1 - 5) x 10(18) cm(-3) and a large Stokes shift (similar to 800 meV) between luminescence and absorption edge. The use of these AlInN layers LM to GaN is then exemplified through the properties of GaN/ AlInN multiple quantum wells ( QWs) suitable for near- infrared intersubband applications. A built- in electric field of 3.64MVcm(-1) solely due to spontaneous polarization is deduced from photoluminescence measurements carried out on strain- free single QW heterostructures, a value in good agreement with that deduced from theoretical calculation. Other potentialities regarding optoelectronics are demonstrated through the successful realization of crack- free highly reflective AlInN/ GaN distributed Bragg reflectors ( R > 99%) and high quality factor microcavities ( Q > 2800) likely to be of high interest for short wavelength vertical light emitting devices and fundamental studies on the strong coupling regime between excitons and cavity photons. In this respect, room temperature ( RT) lasing of a LM AlInN/ GaN vertical cavity surface emitting laser under optical pumping is reported. A description of the selective lateral oxidation of AlInN layers for current confinement in nitride- based light emitting devices and the selective chemical etching of oxidized AlInN layers is also given. Finally, the characterization of LM AlInN/ GaN heterojunctions will reveal the potential of such a system for the fabrication of high electron mobility transistors through the report of a high two- dimensional electron gas sheet carrier density ( n(s) similar to 2.6 x 10(13) cm(-2)) combined with a RT mobility mu(e) similar to 1170 cm(2) V-1 s(-1) and a low sheet resistance, R similar to 210 Omega square.


Advanced Materials | 2010

Increased color-conversion efficiency in hybrid light-emitting diodes utilizing non-radiative energy transfer

Soontorn Chanyawadee; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis; R. T. Harley; Martin D. B. Charlton; Dmitri V. Talapin; Hong Wen Huang; Chung-Hsiang Lin

An efficient hybrid color-conversion light-emitting device consisting of colloidal nanocrystal quantum dots (NQDs) and a surface-patterned GaN-based LED is demonstrated (see figure). Excitation in a surface-patterned LED is efficiently transferred to NQD emitters via non-radiative energy transfer. A twofold enhancement of the NQD emission is achieved.


Nature Communications | 2013

Single-mode tunable laser emission in the single-exciton regime from colloidal nanocrystals

C. Grivas; Chunyong Li; P. Andreakou; Pengfei Wang; Ming Ding; Gilberto Brambilla; Liberato Manna; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis

Whispering-gallery-mode resonators have been extensively used in conjunction with different materials for the development of a variety of photonic devices. Among the latter, hybrid structures, consisting of dielectric microspheres and colloidal core/shell semiconductor nanocrystals as gain media, have attracted interest for the development of microlasers and studies of cavity quantum electrodynamic effects. Here we demonstrate single-exciton, single-mode, spectrally tuned lasing from ensembles of optical antenna-designed, colloidal core/shell CdSe/CdS quantum rods deposited on silica microspheres. We obtain single-exciton emission by capitalizing on the band structure of the specific core/shell architecture that strongly localizes holes in the core, and the two-dimensional quantum confinement of electrons across the elongated shell. This creates a type-II conduction band alignment driven by coulombic repulsion that eliminates non-radiative multi-exciton Auger recombination processes, thereby inducing a large exciton–bi-exciton energy shift. Their ultra-low thresholds and single-mode, single-exciton emission make these hybrid lasers appealing for various applications, including quantum information processing.


Nature Materials | 2014

Polariton-mediated energy transfer between organic dyes in a strongly coupled optical microcavity

David M. Coles; Niccolo Somaschi; Paolo Michetti; Caspar Clark; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis; P. G. Savvidis; David G. Lidzey

Strongly coupled optical microcavities containing different exciton states permit the creation of hybrid-polariton modes that can be described in terms of a linear admixture of cavity-photon and the constituent excitons. Such hybrid states have been predicted to have optical properties that are different from their constituent parts, making them a test bed for the exploration of light-matter coupling. Here, we use strong coupling in an optical microcavity to mix the electronic transitions of two J-aggregated molecular dyes and use both non-resonant photoluminescence emission and photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy to show that hybrid-polariton states act as an efficient and ultrafast energy-transfer pathway between the two exciton states. We argue that this type of structure may act as a model system to study energy-transfer processes in biological light-harvesting complexes.


Journal of Physics D | 2008

New light from hybrid inorganic-organic emitters

C. Belton; Grigorios Itskos; G. Heliotis; Paul N. Stavrinou; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis; John M. Lupton; S. Pereira; Erdan Gu; C. Griffin; B. Guilhabert; Ian Watson; Allan R. Mackintosh; Richard A. Pethrick; Jochen Feldmann; R. Murray; Martin D. Dawson; Donal D. C. Bradley

We present the highlights of a research programme on hybrid inorganic?organic light emitters. These devices combine recent developments in III?V nitride technology (including UV emitting micro-arrays and specifically tailored quantum wells) with conjugated polymers to access the entire visible spectrum. Two types of devices are studied, those based on down conversion of the quantum well emission by radiative transfer and those based on non-radiative resonant energy transfer. The spectral and operating characteristics of the devices are described in detail. Selectable colour micro-arrays and bar emitters are demonstrated. The nature of the non-radiative energy transfer process has also been studied and we find transfer efficiencies of up to 43% at 15?K, with a 1/R2 dependence on the distance between quantum well and polymer layer, suggesting a plane?plane interaction. The relative importance of the non-radiative resonant energy transfer process increases with temperature to be up to 20 times more efficient, at 300?K, than the radiative transfer process.


Optics Letters | 2012

Tunable, continuous-wave Ti:sapphire channel waveguide lasers written by femtosecond and picosecond laser pulses

C. Grivas; Costantino Corbari; Gilberto Brambilla; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis

Fabrication and cw lasing at 798.25 nm is reported for femtosecond (fs) and picosecond (ps) laser-inscribed channel waveguides in Ti:sapphire crystals. Lasing in channels written by fs (ps) pulses was obtained above a threshold of 84 mW (189 mW) with a maximum output power and a slope efficiency of 143 mW (45 mW) and 23.5% (7.1%), respectively. The emission wavelength was tuned over a 170 nm range by using a birefringent filter in an external cavity.


Physical Review B | 2008

Nonradiative exciton energy transfer in hybrid organic-inorganic heterostructures

Soontorn Chanyawadee; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis; R. T. Harley; David G. Lidzey; M. Henini

Nonradiative energy transfer from a GaAs quantum well to a thin overlayer of an infrared organic semiconductor dye is unambiguously demonstrated. The dynamics of exciton transfer are studied in the time domain by using pump-probe spectroscopy at the donor site and fluorescence spectroscopy at the acceptor site. The effect is observed as simultaneous increase in the population decay rate at the donor and of the rise time of optical emission at the acceptor sites. The hybrid configuration under investigation provides an alternative nonradiative, noncontact pumping route to electrical carrier injection that overcomes the losses imposed by the associated low carrier mobility of organic emitters.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Nonlinear optical spin hall effect and long-range spin transport in polariton lasers

Elena Kammann; Timothy Chi Hin Liew; Hamid Ohadi; Pasquale Cilibrizzi; Panayiotis Tsotsis; Z. Hatzopoulos; P. G. Savvidis; Alexey Kavokin; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis

We report on the experimental observation of the nonlinear analogue of the optical spin Hall effect under highly nonresonant circularly polarized excitation of an exciton-polariton condensate in a GaAs/AlGaAs microcavity. The circularly polarized polariton condensates propagate over macroscopic distances, while the collective condensate spins coherently precess around an effective magnetic field in the sample plane performing up to four complete revolutions.


Physical Review B | 2013

Polariton condensation in an optically induced two-dimensional potential

Alexis Askitopoulos; Hamid Ohadi; Alexey Kavokin; Z. Hatzopoulos; P. G. Savvidis; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis

We demonstrate experimentally the condensation of exciton polaritons through optical trapping. The nonresonant pump profile is shaped into a ring and projected to a high quality factor microcavity where it forms a two-dimensional repulsive optical potential originating from the interactions of polaritons with the excitonic reservoir. Increasing the population of particles in the trap eventually leads to the emergence of a confined polariton condensate that is spatially decoupled from the decoherence inducing reservoir, before any buildup of coherence on the excitation region. In a reference experiment, where the trapping mechanism is switched off by changing the excitation intensity profile, polariton condensation takes place for excitation densities more than two times higher and the resulting condensate is subject to much stronger dephasing and depletion processes.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Temperature dependence of exciton transfer in hybrid quantum well/ nanocrystal heterostructures

Stefan Rohrmoser; Julia Baldauf; R. T. Harley; Pavlos G. Lagoudakis; Sameer Sapra; Alexander Eychmüller; Ian Watson

The authors investigate the temperature dependence of exciton transfer from a single InGaN quantum well (QW) donor to colloidal CdS nanocrystal quantum dot acceptors and obtain an optimum transfer efficiency of 65% at 60K. Time and spectrally resolved measurements reveal that the transfer efficiency is dominated by the interplay between exciton localization and nonradiative recombination intrinsic to the QW.

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Alexey Kavokin

University of Southampton

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Hamid Ohadi

University of Southampton

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R. T. Harley

University of Southampton

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