10 research outputs found
Magnetically controlled exciton transfer in hybrid quantum dot-quantum well nanostructures
A magnetophotoluminescence study of the carrier transfer with hybrid
InAs/GaAs quantum dot(QD)-InGaAs quantum well (QW) structures is carried out
where we observe an unsual dependence of the photoluminescence (PL) on the GaAs
barrier thickness at strong magnetic field and excitation density. For the case
of a thin barrier the QW PL intensity is observed to increase at the expense of
a decrease in the QD PL intensity. This is attributed to changes in the
interplane carrier dynamics in the QW and the wetting layer (WL) resulting from
increasing the magnetic field along with changes in the coupling between QD
excited states and exciton states in the QW and the WL
Effect of dimensionality and morphology on polarized photoluminescence in quantum dot-chain structures
Change of the photoluminescence (PL) polarization is studied by changing the excitation intensity and temperature for aligned In(Ga)As quantum dot (QD) structures with varying inter-dot distances grown by molecular beam epitaxy on semi-insulating GaAs (100) substrates. An unusual increase of the polarization ratio is observed by increasing the temperature and/or excitation intensity throughout a low temperature (T < 70 K) and low intensity ('I IND. ex' < 1 W/'cm POT. 2') range. This increase as well as the general behavior of the polarized PL are the results of the exciton dynamics and the peculiarities of the system morphology. They are due to the varying inter-dot distances which change the system from zero-dimensional comprised of isolated QDs to one-dimensional comprised of wire-like structures
Cooperative Effects in the Photoluminescence of (In,Ga)As/GaAs Quantum Dot Chain Structures
Multilayer In0.4Ga0.6As/GaAs quantum dot (QD) chain samples are investigated by means of cw and time-resolved photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy in order to study the peculiarities of interdot coupling in such nanostructures. The temperature dependence of the PL has revealed details of the confinement. Non-thermal carrier distribution through in-chain, interdot wave function coupling is found. The peculiar dependences of the PL decay time on the excitation and detection energies are ascribed to the electronic interdot coupling and the long-range coupling through the radiation field. It is shown that the dependence of the PL decay time on the excitation wavelength is a result of the superradiance effect
Redistribution of Tb and Eu ions in ZnO films grown on different substrates under thermal annealing and its impact on Tb-Eu energy transfer
International audienc
Effect of tunneling transfer on thermal redistribution of carriers in hybrid dot-well nanostructures
The thermally induced redistribution of carriers between quantum well (QW) and quantum dot (QD) layers in a hybrid dot-well system composed of InAs QDs and an InGaAs QW is studied by means of photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy. This redistribution significantly affects the QD and QW PL intensities depending both on the dot-well barrier thickness and height. For comparatively thin barriers, the interplay between tunnel and thermal carrier fluxes becomes crucial, governing the exciton dynamics in a tunnel injection dot-well structure at elevated temperatures. For a sufficiently thick spacer, it is shown that exciton localization within the QW, apparently induced by QD strain fields, has a profound influence on the transfer dynamics at low temperatures.NSF (DMR-1008107)DFG (580/8-1