Abstract

Investigation of light–matter interactions in two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors is essential to understand many-body effects and explore their applications in photonics. 2D semiconductor microcavities can be formed by the integration of 2D semiconductor active media with planar Fabry–Perot resonant cavities. The emerging exciton–photon interactions between the strongly bound excitons in 2D semiconductors and the cavity photons allow exploring on the wealthy photonic and polaritonic physics of bosonic quasiparticles in the 2D limit. This Perspective focuses on recent advances in exciton–photon interactions of 2D semiconductor microcavities and their inspiring applications. First, we picture the research scope of 2D semiconductor microcavities, sort out the historical development from conventional semiconductor microcavities to the emerged 2D semiconductor microcavities, and illustrate mostly employed device structures. Second, we classify exciton–photon interactions in 2D semiconductor microcavities according to their coupling strengths. In the weak coupling regime, control of spontaneous emission and photon lasing are discussed together with the Purcell effect. In the strong coupling regime, we summarize experimental observations and theoretical predictions on Rabi splitting, Bose–Einstein condensation, polariton lasing, superfluidity, and superconductivity. Third, four types of leading-edge applications are outlined, including on-chip coherent light sources, microcavity-enhanced single-photon sources, topological photonics, and other nonlinear optics. Finally, we highlight the remaining challenges and future opportunities for fundamental physics of 2D semiconductor microcavities and their technological applications.

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