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In this thesis, we study two different aspects of many-particle physics. In the first part, we study the Bose-Einstein condensation of microcavity exciton-polaritons in different artificial lattices. Bose-Einstein condensation is a quantum phase transition, which allows the system to macroscopically occupy its ground state and develop coherence spontaneously. Often studied in microcavities, which are optical cavities that trap light at specific wavelengths, exciton-polaritons are a kind of quasiparticle arising from the strong coupling between quantum well excitons and cavity photons. By periodically aligning cavity pillars in different patterns, one can achieve different artificial lattice structures. With this setup, we apply the driven-dissipative Gross-Pitaevskii equations to investigate the different consequences of the condensation by changing the pumping schemes and the design of the trapping potentials. Topics include multivalley condensation, phase selection and intermittency of exciton-polariton condensation, flat band condensation, and exciton-polariton topological insulators. In the second part of this thesis, we focus on the electron-scattering properties of a hybrid Bose-Fermi system. We consider a system consisting of a spatially separated two-dimensional electron gas layer and an exciton gas layer that interacts via Coulomb forces. We study the temperature dependence of the systems resistivity with this interlayer electron-exciton interaction and compare the results with the electron-phonon interaction.
Van der Waals materials and heterostructures manifesting strongly bound room temperature exciton states exhibit emergent physical phenomena and are of a great promise for optoelectronic applications. Here, we demonstrate that nanostructured multilaye
One of the recently established paradigms in the study of condensed matter physics is examining a systems behaviour in artificially constructed potentials. This allows one to obtain insight on a range of physical phenomena which may require non-feasi
Exciton-polaritons are mixed light-matter quasiparticles. We have developed a statistical model describing stochastic exciton-photon transitions within a condensate of exciton polaritons. We show that the exciton-photon correlator depends on the hidd
We demonstrate control over light-matter coupling at room temperature combining a field effect transistor (FET) with a tuneable optical microcavity. Our microcavity FET comprises a monolayer tungsten disulfide WS$_2$ semiconductor which was transferr
Strong spin-orbit coupling and inversion symmetry breaking in transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers yield the intriguing effects of valley-dependent optical selection rules. As such, it is possible to substantially polarize valley excitons with