Deeply Subwavelength Blue-Range Nanolaser (2509.13062v1)
Abstract: Modern high-definition display and augmented reality technologies require the development of ultracompact micro- and nano-pixels with colors covering the full gamut and high brightness. In this regard, lasing nano-pixels emitting light in the spectral range 400-700 nm are highly demanded. Despite progress in red, green, and ultraviolet nanolasers, the demonstrated blue-range (400-500 nm) single-particle-based lasers are still not subwavelength yet. Here we fabricate CsPbCl$_3$ cubic-shaped single-crystal nanolasers on a silver substrate by wet chemistry synthesis, producing their size range around 100-500 nm, where the nanoparticle with sizes 0.145$\mu$m$\times$0.195$\mu$m$\times$0.19$\mu$m and volume 0.005 $\mu$m$3$ (i.e. $\sim\lambda3$/13) is the smallest nanolaser among the lasers operating in the blue range reported so far, with emission wavelength around $\lambda\approx 415$ nm. Experimental results at a temperature of 80 K and theoretical modeling show that the CsPbCl$_3$ nanolaser is a polaritonic laser where exciton-polaritons are strongly coupled with Mie resonances enhanced by the metallic substrate. As a result, the combination of the strong excitonic response of CsPbCl$_3$ materials, its high crystalline quality, and optimized optical resonant properties resulting in a population-inversion-free lasing regime are the key factors making the proposed nanolaser design superior among previously reported ones in the blue spectral range.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.