Abstract

We investigate the demonstration and quantification of the strong coupling between excitons and guided photons in a GaN slab waveguide. The dispersions of waveguide polaritons are measured from T=6~K to 300~K through gratings. They are carefully analyzed within four models based on different assumptions, in order to assess the strong coupling regime. We prove that the guided photons and excitons are strongly coupled at all investigated temperatures, with a small $(11 \%)$ dependence on the temperature. However the values of the Rabi splitting strongly vary among the four models: the "coupled oscillator" model over-estimates the coupling; the analytical "Elliott-Tanguy" model precisely describes the dielectric susceptibility of GaN near the excitonic transition, leading to a Rabi splitting equal to $82 \pm 10 \ meV$ for TE0 modes; the experimental ellipsometry-based model leads to smaller values of $55 \pm 6 \ meV.$ We evidence that for waveguides including active layers with large oscillator strengths, as required for room-temperature polaritonic devices, a strong bending of the modes dispersion is not necessarily the signature of the strong-coupling, which requires for its reliable assessment a precise analysis of the material dielectric susceptibility.

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