97 research outputs found
Tuning the tunnel coupling of quantum dot molecules with longitudinal magnetic fields
We show that the energy splitting between the bonding and antibonding
molecular states of holes in vertically stacked quantum dots can be tuned using
longitudinal magnetic fields. With increasing field, the energy splitting first
decreases down to zero and then to negative values, which implies a
bonding-to-antibonding ground state transition. This effect is a consequence of
the enhancement of the valence band spin-orbit interaction induced by the
magnetic field, and it provides a flexible mechanism to switch the molecular
ground state from bonding to antibonding.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figs; accepted by Applied Physics Letters. After it is
published it will be found at http://apl.aip.org
The Role of Alternance Symmetry in Magnetoconductance
We show that the direction of coherent electron transport across a cyclic
system of quantum dots or a cyclic molecule can be modulated by an external
magnetic field if the cycle has an odd number of hopping sites, but the
transport becomes completely symmetric if the number is even. These contrasting
behaviors, which remain in the case of interacting electrons, are a consequence
of the absence or presence of alternance symmetry in the system. These findings
are relevant for the design of nanocircuits based on coupled quantum dots or
molecular junctions.Comment: to be published in PR
Origin of two-hole triplet splitting in circular quantum dots
Recent photoluminescence spectra of positively charged excitons in InAs/GaAs quantum dots have revealed the existence of large splittings between the View the MathML sourcep-shell triplet sublevels of holes. We provide an intuitive explanation for their origin in terms of heavy hole-light hole coupling using Luttinger spinors. These splittings are present even in symmetric quantum dots at zero field and their magnitude can be tuned by the geometry of the dot. We show that the spin purity of the triplet drastically decreases with the aspect ratio, but that of the singlet ground state remains high
Excitons in core-only, core-shell and core-crown CdSe nanoplatelets: interplay between in-plane electron-hole correlation, spatial and dielectric confinement
Using semi-analytical models we calculate the energy, effective Bohr radius
and radiative lifetime of neutral excitons confined in CdSe colloidal
nanoplatelets (NPLs). The excitonic properties are largely governed by the
electron-hole in-plane correlation, which in NPLs is enhanced by the
quasi-two-dimensional motion and the dielectric mismatch with the organic
environment. In NPLs with lateral size nm the exciton behavior
is essentially that in a quantum well, with superradiance leading to exciton
lifetimes of 1 ps or less, only limited by the NPL area. However, for
nm excitons enter an intermediate confinement regime, hence departing from the
quantum well behavior. In heterostructured NPLs, different response is observed
for core/shell and core/crown configurations. In the former, the strong
vertical confinement limits separation of electrons and holes even for type-II
band alignment. The exciton behavior is then similar to that in core-only NPL,
albeit with weakened dielectric effects. In the latter, charge separation is
also inefficient if band alignment is quasi-type-II (e.g. in CdSe/CdS), because
electron-hole interaction drives both carriers into the core. However, it
becomes very efficient for type-II alignment, for which we predict exciton
lifetimes reaching .Comment: typographical errors fixed (with respect to v1 and PRB) in eqs. 9,12
and definition of overla
Symmetry induced hole-spin mixing in quantum dot molecules
We investigate theoretically the spin purity of single holes confined in
vertically coupled GaAs/AlGaAs quantum dots (QDs) under longitudinal magnetic
fields. A unique behavior is observed for triangular QDs, by which the spin is
largely pure when the hole is in one of the dots, but it becomes strongly mixed
when an electric field is used to drive it into molecular resonance. The spin
admixture is due to the valence band spin-orbit interaction, which is greatly
enhanced in C3h symmetry environments. The strong yet reversible electrical
control of hole spin suggests that molecules with C3-symmetry QDs, like those
obtained with [111] growth, can outperform the usual C2-symmetry QDs obtained
with [001] growth for the development of scalable qubit architectures.Comment: 5-pages manuscript + supplementary information. Version to be
published in PRB Rapid Communication
Characteristic molecular properties of one-electron double quantum rings under magnetic fields
The molecular states of conduction electrons in laterally coupled quantum rings
are investigated theoretically. The states are shown to have a distinct magnetic field
dependence, which gives rise to periodic fluctuations of the tunnel splitting and ring
angular momentum in the vicinity of the ground state crossings. The origin of these
effects can be traced back to the Aharonov-Bohm oscillations of the energy levels, along
with the quantum mechanical tunneling between the rings. We propose a setup using
double quantum rings which shows that Aharonov-Bohm effects can be observed even
if the net magnetic flux trapped by the carriers is zero
A simple variational quantum Monte Carlo-effective mass approach for excitons and trions in quantum dots
A computational model is presented to calculate the ground state energy
of neutral and charged excitons confined in semiconductor quantum dots.
The model is based on the variational Quantum Monte Carlo method and
effective mass Hamiltonians. Through an iterative Newton-Rhapson process,
minimizing the local energy, and (optional) parallelization of random walkers, fast and accurate estimates of both confinement and Coulomb binding
energies can be obtained in standard desktop computers. To illustrate the
reach of the model, we provide Fortran programs and illustrative calculations
for colloidal CdSe nanoplatelets with large lateral dimensions and dielectric
confinement, where electronic correlations are strong. The results compare
well with exact variational calculations and largely outperform configuration
interaction calculations in computational efficienc
Magnetic field implementation in multiband k.p Hamiltonians of holes in semiconductor heterostructures
We propose an implementation of external homogeneous magnetic fields in
kp Hamiltonians for holes in heterostructures, in which we made use of
the minimal coupling prior to introduce the envelope function approximation.
Illustrative calculations for holes in InGaAs quantum dot molecules show that
the proposed Hamiltonian outperforms standard Luttinger model [Physical Review
102, 1030 (1956)] describing the experimentally observed magnetic response. The
present implementation culminates our previous proposal [Phys. Rev. B 82,
155307 (2010)].Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitte
Nature and Control of Shakeup Processes in Colloidal Nanoplatelets
Recent experiments suggest that the photoluminescence line
width of CdSe nanoplatelets (NPLs) and core/shell CdSe/CdS NPLs may be
broadened by the presence of shakeup (SU) lines from negatively charged
trions. We carry out a theoretical analysis, based on effective mass and
configuration interaction (CI) simulations, to identify the physical conditions
that enable such processes. We confirm that trions in colloidal NPLs are
susceptible of presenting SU lines up to 1 order of magnitude stronger than in
epitaxial quantum wells, stimulated by dielectric confinement. For these
processes to take place, trions must be weakly bound to off-centered charge
traps, which relax symmetry selection rules. Charges on the lateral sidewalls are
particularly efficient to this end. Our simulations display a single strong SU
replica in most instances, which agrees well with experiments on CdSe NPLs, but suggests that the multipeaked emission reported
for core/shell CdSe/CdS NPLs must involve other factors beyond SU processes. We propose emission from a metastable spin triplet
trion state may be responsible. Understanding the origin of SU processes may open paths to rational design of NPLs with narrower
line width
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