302 research outputs found
A model for exciton-polaritons in uniaxial molecular crystals describing spatial dispersion, refraction and reflection
Propagation of light through a uniaxial material is studied using field
theoretical methods. The materials is modeled by cubic lattice of oriented
classical Lorentz oscillators. A two-step coarse graining approach is applied.
At the bulk level, excitations of the coupled light-matter system, or
polaritons, are described by a Proca-type equation for massive vector bosons.
On the microscopic level, multiple scattering is used to relate the sub-luminal
speed of the polaritons to the polarizability of the Lorentz oscillators. For
each direction of propagation of the polaritons, three independent
polarizations exist, consistent with the integer spin of massive vector bosons.
Reflection and refraction are calculated by imposing the requirement of a
uniform gauge for the electromagnetic vector potential across the interface of
the uniaxial molecular material and vacuum. Reflectance spectra near the
resonance frequency are calculated. The spectra feature a characteristic
minimum in middle of the reflection band, in agreement with experiment. An
incident unpolarized light beam is predicted to refract into three different
rays. The model supports surface bound excitations and predicts a Goos-Haenchen
shift of the reflected beam upon reflection of light incident from vacuum onto
the material.Comment: 55 pages, 9 figure
Second-order calculation of the local density of states above a nanostructured surface
We have numerically implemented a perturbation series for the scattered
electromagnetic fields above rough surfaces, due to Greffet, allowing us to
evaluate the local density of states to second order in the surface profile
function. We present typical results for thermal near fields of surfaces with
regular nanostructures, investigating the relative magnitude of the
contributions appearing in successive orders. The method is then employed for
estimating the resolution limit of an idealized Near-Field Scanning Thermal
Microscope (NSThM).Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Modulational instability and solitons in excitonic semiconductor waveguides
Nonlinear light propagation in a single-mode micron-size waveguide made of
semiconducting excitonic material has been theoretically studied in terms of
exciton-polaritons by using an analysis based on macroscopic fields. When a
light pulse is spectrally centered in the vicinity of the ground-state Wannier
exciton resonance, it interacts with the medium nonlinearly. This optical cubic
nonlinearity is caused by the repulsive exciton-exciton interactions in the
semiconductor, and at resonance it is orders of magnitude larger than the Kerr
nonlinearity (e.g., in silica). We demonstrate that a very strong and
unconventional modulational instability takes place, which has not been
previously reported. After reducing the problem to a single nonlinear
Schr\"odinger-like equation, we also explore the formation of solitary waves
both inside and outside the polaritonic gap and find evidence of spectral
broadening. A realistic physical model of the excitonic waveguide structure is
proposed.Comment: 7 pages (2-column), 7 figure
Field emission in ordered arrays of ZnO nanowires prepared by nanosphere lithography and extended Fowler-Nordheim analyses
A multistage chemical method based on nanosphere lithography was used to produce hexagonally patterned arrays of ZnO vertical nanowires, with 1 lm interspacing and aspect ratio 20, with a view to study the effects of emitter uniformity on the current emitted upon application of a dc voltage across a 250 lm vacuum gap. A new treatment, based on the use of analytical expressions for the image-potential correction functions, was applied to the linear region below 2000 V of the Fowler-Nordheim (FN) plot and showed the most suitable value of the work function / in the range 3.3–4.5 eV (conduction band emission) with a Schottky lowering parameter y ~ 0.72 and a field enhancement factor c in the 700–1100 range. A modeled c value of 200 was calculated for an emitter shape of a prolate ellipsoid of revolution and also including the effect of nanowire screening, in fair agreement with the experimental value. The Fowler-Nordheim current densities
and effective emission areas were derived as 1011 Am2 and 1017 m2, respectively, showing that field emission likely takes place in an area of atomic dimensions at the tip of the emitter. Possible causes for the observed departure from linear FN plot behavior above 2000 V were discussed
Blueshifts of the emission energy in type-II quantum dot and quantum ring nanostructures
We have studied the ensemble photoluminescence (PL) of 11 GaSb/GaAs quantum dot/ring (QD/QR) samples over ≥5 orders of magnitude of laser power. All samples exhibit a blueshift of PL energy, ΔE, with increasing excitation power, as expected for type-II structures. It is often assumed that this blueshift is due to band-bending at the type-II interface. However, for a sample where charge-state sub-peaks are observed within the PL emission, it is unequivocally shown that the blueshift due to capacitive charging is an order of magnitude larger than the band bending contribution. Moreover, the size of the blueshift and its linear dependence on occupancy predicted by a simple capacitive model are faithfully replicated in the data. In contrast, when QD/QR emission intensity, I, is used to infer QD/QR occupancy, n, via the bimolecular recombination approximation (I ∝ n 2), exponents, x, in Δ E ∝ I x are consistently lower than expected, and strongly sample dependent. We conclude that the exponent x cannot be used to differentiate between capacitive charging and band bending as the origin of the blueshift in type-II QD/QRs, because the bimolecular recombination is not applicable to type-II QD/QRs
Experimental evidences of quantum confined 2D indirect excitons in single barrier GaAs/AlAs/GaAs heterostructure using photocapacitance at room temperature
We investigated excitonic absorptions in a GaAs/AlAs/GaAs single barrier heterostructure using both photocapacitance and photocurrent spectroscopies at room temperature. Photocapacitance spectra show well defined resonance peaks of indirect excitons formed around the C-AlAs barrier. Unlike DC-photocurrent spectra, frequency dependent photocapacitance spectra interestingly red shift, sharpen up, and then decrease with increasing tunneling at higher biases. Such dissimilarities clearly point out that different exciton dynamics govern these two spectral measurements. We also argue why such quantum confined dipoles of indirect excitons can have thermodynamically finite probabilities to survive even at room temperature. Finally, our observations demonstrate that the photocapacitance technique, which was seldom used to detect excitons in the past, is useful for selective detection and experimental tuning of relatively small numbers ( 1011/cm2) of photo-generated indirect excitons having large effective dipole moments in this type of quasi-two dimensional heterostructures
Response theory for time-resolved second-harmonic generation and two-photon photoemission
A unified response theory for the time-resolved nonlinear light generation
and two-photon photoemission (2PPE) from metal surfaces is presented. The
theory allows to describe the dependence of the nonlinear optical response and
the photoelectron yield, respectively, on the time dependence of the exciting
light field. Quantum-mechanical interference effects affect the results
significantly. Contributions to 2PPE due to the optical nonlinearity of the
surface region are derived and shown to be relevant close to a plasmon
resonance. The interplay between pulse shape, relaxation times of excited
electrons, and band structure is analyzed directly in the time domain. While
our theory works for arbitrary pulse shapes, we mainly focus on the case of two
pulses of the same mean frequency. Difficulties in extracting relaxation rates
from pump-probe experiments are discussed, for example due to the effect of
detuning of intermediate states on the interference. The theory also allows to
determine the range of validity of the optical Bloch equations and of
semiclassical rate equations, respectively. Finally, we discuss how collective
plasma excitations affect the nonlinear optical response and 2PPE.Comment: 27 pages, including 11 figures, version as publishe
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