“…These nanomaterials are obtained by combining plasmonic substrates, such as nanostructured surfaces or nanoparticles, with excitonic systems like organic dyes, quantum dots, carbon nanotubes, or 2-dimensional transition-metal dichalcogenides, such as MoS 2 or WS 2 . − The peculiar optical properties of these materials might find application in photovoltaics, sensing, , digital data storage, and in the broad field of photonics as a manner to control light–matter interactions at the nanoscale. ,, However, plexciton behavior has to be wholly understood and characterized. As an example, the nature of excitations and the mechanisms of energy dissipation in these materials and phenomena as ultrafast coherences (Rabi oscillations), Bose–Einstein condensation, and “induced transparency” (or Fano dip) , are the object of several ongoing investigations.…”