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We have fabricated organic semiconductor microcavities having an extended optical path-length (up to 2 µm) that contain J-aggregates of a cyanine dye. These structures are studied using optical-reflectivity and are found to be characterized by a series of polaritonic modes. By changing the effective oscillator strength of the dye within the cavity, we evidence a transition from "normal" strong coupling in which the photon modes are coupled to one another via the excitonic transition of the molecular dye to a state in which photon-modes become decoupled. We use an eight-level modified Hamiltonian to describe the optical properties of the system and compare the distribution of the confined optical field in coupled and decoupled structures.
Georgiou et al. (Wed,) studied this question.