1,375 research outputs found
Asymmetry in self-assembled quantum dot-molecules made of identical InAs/GaAs quantum dots
We show that a diatomic dot molecule made of two identical, vertically
stacked, strained InAs/GaAs self-assembled dots exhibits an asymmetry in its
single-particle and may-particle wavefunctions. The single-particle wave
function is asymmetric due to the inhomogeneous strain, while the asymmetry of
the many-particle wavefunctions is caused by the correlation induced
localization: the lowest singlet and triplet states
show that the two electrons are each localized on different dots within the
molecule, for the next singlet states both electrons are localized
on the same (bottom) dot for interdot separation 8 nm. The singlet-triplet
splitting is found to be meV at inter-dot separation =9 nm and as
large as 100 meV for =4 nm, orders of magnitude larger than the few meV
found in the large (50 - 100 nm) electrostatically confined dots
1.55-μm mode-locked quantum-dot lasers with 300 MHz frequency tuning range
This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. This article appeared in Appl. Phys. Lett. 106, 031114 (2015) and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4906451.Passive mode-locking of two-section quantum-dot mode-locked lasers grown by metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy on InP is reported. 1250-μm long lasers exhibit a wide tuning range of 300 MHz around the fundamental mode-locking frequency of 33.48 GHz. The frequency tuning is achieved by varying the reverse bias of the saturable absorber from 0 to −2.2 V and the gain section current from 90 to 280 mA. 3 dB optical spectra width of 6–7 nm leads to ex-facet optical pulses with full-width half-maximum down to 3.7 ps. Single-section quantum-dot mode-locked lasers show 0.8 ps broad optical pulses after external fiber-based compression. Injection current tuning from 70 to 300 mA leads to 30 MHz frequency tuning.DFG, 43659573, SFB 787: Halbleiter - Nanophotonik: Materialien, Modelle, BauelementeEC/FP7/EU/264687/Postgraduate Research on Photonics as an Enabling Technology/PROPHE
Magneto-capacitance probing of the many-particle states in InAs dots
We use frequency-dependent capacitance-voltage spectroscopy to measure the
tunneling probability into self-assembled InAs quantum dots. Using an in-plane
magnetic field of variable strength and orientation, we are able to obtain
information on the quasi-particle wave functions in momentum space for 1 to 6
electrons per dot. For the lowest two energy states, we find a good agreement
with Gaussian functions for a harmonic potential. The high energy orbitals
exhibit signatures of anisotropic confinement and correlation effects.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Electrical manipulation of an electronic two-state system in Ge/Si quantum dots
We calculate that the electron states of strained self-assembled Ge/Si
quantum dots provide a convenient two-state system for electrical control. An
electronic state localized at the apex of the quantum dot is nearly degenerate
with a state localized at the base of the quantum dot. Small electric fields
shift the electronic ground state from apex-localized to base-localized, which
permits sensitive tuning of the electronic, optical and magnetic properties of
the dot. As one example, we describe how spin-spin coupling between two Ge/Si
dots can be controlled very sensitively by shifting the individual dot's
electronic ground state between apex and base
Optical imaging of resonant electrical carrier injection into individual quantum dots
We image the micro-electroluminescence (EL) spectra of self-assembled InAs
quantum dots (QDs) embedded in the intrinsic region of a GaAs p-i-n diode and
demonstrate optical detection of resonant carrier injection into a single QD.
Resonant tunneling of electrons and holes into the QDs at bias voltages below
the flat-band condition leads to sharp EL lines characteristic of individual
QDs, accompanied by a spatial fragmentation of the surface EL emission into
small and discrete light- emitting areas, each with its own spectral
fingerprint and Stark shift. We explain this behavior in terms of Coulomb
interaction effects and the selective excitation of a small number of QDs
within the ensemble due to preferential resonant tunneling paths for carriers.Comment: 4 page
Optical matrix element in InAs/GaAs quantum dots: Dependence on quantum dot parameters
We present a theoretical analysis of the optical matrix element between the electron and hole ground states in InAs/GaAs quantum dots (QDs) modeled with a truncated pyramidal shape. We use an eight-band k center dot p Hamiltonian to calculate the QD electronic structure, including strain and piezoelectric effects. The ground state optical matrix element is very sensitive to variations in both the QD size and shape. For all shapes, the matrix element initially increases with increasing dot height, as the electron and hole wave functions become more localized in k space. Depending on the QD aspect ratio and on the degree of pyramidal truncation, the matrix element then reaches a maximum for some dot shapes at intermediate size beyond which it decreases abruptly in larger dots, where piezoelectric effects lead to a marked reduction in electron-hole overlap. (c) 2005 American Institute of Physics. (DOI:10.1063/1.2130378
Carrier Dynamics in Submonolayer InGaAs/GaAs Quantum Dots
Carrier dynamics of submonolayer (SML) InGaAs/GaAs quantum dots (QDs) were
studied by micro-photoluminecence (MPL), selectively excited photoluminescence
(SEPL), and time-resolved photoluminescence (TRPL). MPL and SEPL show the
coexistence of localized and delocalized states, and different local phonon
modes. TRPL reveal shorter recombination lifetimes and longer capture times for
the QDs with higher emission energy. This suggests that the smallest SML QDs
are formed by perfectly vertically correlated 2D InAs islands, having the
highest In content and the lowest emission energy, while a slight deviation
from the perfectly vertical correlation produces larger QDs with lower In
content and higher emission energy.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Size-dependent fine-structure splitting in self-organized InAs/GaAs quantum dots
A systematic variation of the exciton fine-structure splitting with quantum
dot size in single InAs/GaAs quantum dots grown by metal-organic chemical vapor
deposition is observed. The splitting increases from -80 to as much as 520
eV with quantum dot size. A change of sign is reported for small quantum
dots. Model calculations within the framework of eight-band k.p theory and the
configuration interaction method were performed. Different sources for the
fine-structure splitting are discussed, and piezoelectricity is pinpointed as
the only effect reproducing the observed trend.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Quantum control of electron--phonon scatterings in artificial atoms
The phonon-induced dephasing dynamics in optically excited semiconductor
quantum dots is studied within the frameworks of the independent Boson model
and optimal control. We show that appropriate tailoring of laser pulses allows
a complete control of the optical excitation despite the phonon dephasing, a
finding in marked contrast to other environment couplings.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Magneto-optical study of thermally annealed InAs-InGaAs-GaAs self-assembled quantum dots
We report a magneto-optical study of InAs-InGaAs-GaAs self-assembled quantum dots (QDs) subjected to post-growth thermal annealing at different temperatures. At low temperatures annealing strongly affects the bimodal distribution of QDs; at higher temperatures a strong blueshift of the emission occurs. Magnetophotoluminescence reveals that the annealing increases the QD size, with a larger effect occurring along the growth axis, and decreases the carrier effective masses. The main contribution to the blueshift is deduced to be an increase in the average Ga composition of the QDs. The inadvertent annealing which occurs during the growth of the upper AlGaAs cladding layer in laser structures is also studied
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