Abstract

Micro- and nanolasers are miniaturized light sources with great potential in optical imaging, sensing, and communication. While various micro- and nanolasers have been synthesized, they are mostly linearly polarized and thus strongly restricted in many new applications, e.g., chiral resolution in synthetic chemistry, cancerous tissue imaging, information storage, and processing. Herein, we experimentally demonstrate the circularly polarized surface emitting perovskite lasers by integrating the as-grown perovskite microcrystals with an all-dielectric metalens. The perovskite microcrystal serves as an optical microcavity and produces linearly polarized laser emission, which is collected by a geometric phase based TiO2 metalens. The left-handed circularly polarized components are collimated by the metalens into a directional laser beam with a divergent angle of <0.9°, whereas the right-handed components are strongly diverged by the same metalens. Consequently, the right-handed circularly polarized components are filtered out, and perovskite lasers with high directionality and pure circular polarization have been experimentally realized.

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