Scientists Illuminate Dark Excitons, Expand Nanotech

Advanced Science Research Center, GC/CUNY

New York, November 12, 2025 — A research team at the City University of New York and the University of Texas at Austin has discovered a way to make previously hidden states of light, known as dark excitons, shine brightly, and control their emission at the nanoscale. Their findings, published today in Nature Photonics, open the door to faster, smaller, and more energy-efficient technologies.

Dark excitons are exotic light-matter states in atomically thin semiconductors that typically remain invisible because they emit light very weakly. These states, however, are highly promising for quantum information and advanced photonic applications due to their unique light-matter interaction properties, long lifetimes and reduced interaction with the environment, which leads to lessened decoherence.

To reveal these elusive states, the team engineered a nanoscale optical cavity using gold nanotubes and a single layer of tungsten diselenide (WSe₂), a material just three atoms thick. This design amplified the light emission from dark excitons by an astonishing 300,000 times, making them not only visible but also controllable.

"This work shows that we can access and manipulate light-matter states that were previously out of reach," said the study's principal investigator Andrea Alù, who is a Distinguished and Einstein Professor of Physics at the CUNY Graduate Center and founding director of the Photonics Initiative at the Advanced Science Research Center at the CUNY Graduate Center (CUNY ASRC). "By turning these hidden states on and off at will and controlling them with nanoscale resolution, we open exciting opportunities to disruptively advance next-generation optical and quantum technologies, including for sensing and computing."

The research team also demonstrated that these dark states can be tuned on demand using electric and magnetic fields, enabling precise control for potential applications in on-chip photonics, sensors, and quantum communication. Unlike previous attempts, this approach preserves the material's natural properties while achieving record-breaking enhancement of light-matter coupling.

"Our study reveals a new family of spin-forbidden dark excitons that had never been observed before," said Jiamin Quan, first author of the study. "This discovery is just the beginning—it opens a path to explore many other hidden quantum states in 2D materials."

This discovery also resolves a long-standing debate about whether plasmonic structures can truly enhance dark excitons without altering their nature as they come in close contact. The authors addressed the challenge by carefully designing the plasmonic-excitonic heterostructure using nanometer-thin layers of boron nitride, key to unveil the new dark excitons observed by the team.

The work was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the Office of Naval Research, and the National Science Foundation.

DOI: 10.1038/s41566-025-01788-w

About the Advanced Science Research Center at the CUNY Graduate Center

The Advanced Science Research Center at the CUNY Graduate Center (CUNY ASRC) is a world-leading center of scientific excellence that elevates STEM inquiry and education at CUNY and beyond. The CUNY ASRC's research initiatives span five distinctive, but broadly interconnected disciplines: nanoscience, photonics, neuroscience, structural biology, and environmental sciences. The center promotes a collaborative, interdisciplinary research culture where renowned and emerging scientists advance their discoveries using state-of-the-art equipment and cutting-edge core facilities.

About the Graduate Center of The City University of New York

The CUNY Graduate Center is a leader in public graduate education devoted to enhancing the public good through pioneering research, serious learning, and reasoned debate. The Graduate Center offers ambitious students nearly 50 doctoral and master's programs of the highest caliber, taught by top faculty from throughout CUNY — the nation's largest urban public university. Through its nearly 40 centers, institutes, initiatives, and the Advanced Science Research Center, the Graduate Center influences public policy and discourse and shapes innovation. The Graduate Center's extensive public programs make it a home for culture and conversation.

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