http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v514/n7522/full/nature13832.html

Giant Rydberg excitons in the copper oxide Cu2O

Nature 514, 343–347 (16 October 2014) doi:10.1038/nature13832Received 05
March 2014 Accepted 02 September 2014 Published online 15 October 2014

A highly excited atom having an electron that has moved into a level with
large principal quantum number is a hydrogen-like object, termed a Rydberg
atom. The giant size of Rydberg atoms1leads to huge interaction effects.
Monitoring these interactions has provided insights into atomic and
molecular physics on the single-quantum level. Excitons—the fundamental
optical excitations in semiconductors2, consisting of an electron and a
positively charged hole—are the condensed-matter analogues of hydrogen.
Highly excited excitons with extensions similar to those of Rydberg atoms
are of interest because they can be placed and moved in a crystal with high
precision using microscopic energy potential landscapes. The interaction of
such Rydberg excitons may allow the formation of ordered exciton phases or
the sensing of elementary excitations in their surroundings on a quantum
level. Here we demonstrate the existence of Rydberg excitons in the copper
oxide Cu2O, with principal quantum numbers as large as n = 25. These states
have giant wavefunction extensions (that is, the average distance between
the electron and the hole) of more than two micrometres, compared to about
a nanometre for the ground state. The strong dipole–dipole interaction
between such excitons is indicated by a blockade effect in which the
presence of one exciton prevents the excitation of another in its vicinity.

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