1,181 research outputs found
Assessment of the notions of band offsets, wells and barriers at nanoscale semiconductor heterojunctions
Epitaxially-grown semiconductor heterostructures give the possibility to
tailor the potential landscape for the carriers in a very controlled way. In
planar lattice-matched heterostructures, the potential has indeed a very simple
and easily predictable behavior: it is constant everywhere except at the
interfaces where there is a step (discontinuity) which only depends on the
composition of the semiconductors in contact. In this paper, we show that this
universally accepted picture can be invalid in nanoscale heterostructures
(e.g., quantum dots, rods, nanowires) which can be presently fabricated in a
large variety of forms. Self-consistent tight-binding calculations applied to
systems containing up to 75 000 atoms indeed demonstrate that the potential may
have a more complex behavior in axial hetero-nanostructures: The band edges can
show significant variations far from the interfaces if the nanostructures are
not capped with a homogeneous shell. These results suggest new strategies to
engineer the electronic properties of nanoscale objects, e.g. for sensors and
photovoltaics.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Optical phonon scattering and theory of magneto-polarons in a quantum cascade laser in a strong magnetic field
We report a theoretical study of the carrier relaxation in a quantum cascade
laser (QCL) subjected to a strong magnetic field. Both the alloy (GaInAs)
disorder effects and the Frohlich interaction are taken into account when the
electron energy differences are tuned to the longitudinal optical (LO) phonon
energy. In the weak electron-phonon coupling regime, a Fermi's golden rule
computation of LO phonon scattering rates shows a very fast non-radiative
relaxation channel for the alloy broadened Landau levels (LL's). In the strong
electron-phonon coupling regime, we use a magneto-polaron formalism and compute
the electron survival probabilities in the upper LL's with including increasing
numbers of LO phonon modes for a large number of alloy disorder configurations.
Our results predict a nonexponential decay of the upper level population once
electrons are injected in this state.Comment: 10 pages, 23 figure
Direct and indirect exciton mixing in a slightly asymmetric double quantum well
We studied, theoretically, the optical absorption spectra for a slightly
asymmetric double quantum well (DQW), in the presence of electric and magnetic
fields. Recent experimental results for a 10.18/3.82/9.61 nm GaAs Al(_{.33}
)Ga(_{.67})As DQW show clearly the different behavior in the luminescence peaks
for the indirect exciton (IX) and left direct exciton (DX) as a function of the
external electric field. We show that the presence of a peak near the (DX)
peak, attributed to an impurity bound left (DX) in the experimental results,
could be a consequence of the non-trivial mixing between excitonic states.Comment: 8 pages and 8 figure
Optical Manipulation of Single Electron Spin in Doped and Undoped Quantum Dots
The optical manipulation of electron spins is of great benefit to solid-state
quantum information processing. In this letter, we provide a comparative study
on the ultrafast optical manipulation of single electron spin in the doped and
undoped quantum dots. The study indicates that the experimental breakthrough
can be preliminarily made in the undoped quantum dots, because of the
relatively less demand.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Broadening effects due to alloy scattering in Quantum Cascade Lasers
We report on calculations of broadening effects in QCL due to alloy
scattering. The output of numerical calculations of alloy broadened Landau
levels compare favorably with calculations performed at the self-consistent
Born approximation. Results for Landau level width and optical absorption are
presented. A disorder activated forbidden transition becomes significant in the
vicinity of crossings of Landau levels which belong to different subbands. A
study of the time dependent survival probability in the lowest Landau level of
the excited subband is performed. It is shown that at resonance the population
relaxation occurs in a subpicosecond scale.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Self-Consistent Electron Subbands of Gaas/Algaas Heterostructure in Magnetic Fields Parallel to the Interface
The effect of strong magnetic fields parallel to GaAs/AlGaAs interface on the
subband structure of a 2D electron layer is ivestigated theoretically. The
system with two levels occupied in zero magnetic field is considered and the
magnetic field induced depletion of the second subband is studied. The
confining potential and the electron dispersion relations are calculated
self-consistently, the electron- electron interaction is taken into account in
the Hartree approximation.Comment: written in LaTeX, 8 pages, 4 figs. available on request from
[email protected]
Photo-induced spin filtering in a double quantum dot
We investigate the spin-resolved electron dynamics in a double quantum dot
driven by ultrafast asymmetric electromagnetic pulses. Using a analytical model
we show that applying an appropriate pulse sequence allows to control
coherently the spin degree of freedom on the femtosecond time scale. It can be
achieved that the spin-up state is localized in a selected quantum dot while
the spin-down state remains in the other dot. We show that this photo-induced
spin-dependent separation can be maintained for a desired period of time.Comment: shortened, revised version 2 article published at Appl. Phys. Let
Nonlinear optical response in gapped graphene
We present a formulation for the nonlinear optical response in gapped
graphene, where the low-energy single-particle spectrum is modeled by massive
Dirac theory. As a representative example of the formulation presented here, we
obtain closed form formula for the third harmonic generation (THG) in gapped
graphene. It turns out that the covariant form of the low-energy theory gives
rise to a peculiar logarithmic singularities in the nonlinear optical spectra.
The universal functional dependence of the response function on dimension-less
quantities indicates that the optical nonlinearity can be largely enhanced by
tuning the gap to smaller values.Comment: http://iopscience.iop.org/0953-8984/labtalk-article/4938
Choosing a basis that eliminates spurious solutions in k.p theory
A small change of basis in k.p theory yields a Kane-like Hamiltonian for the
conduction and valence bands of narrow-gap semiconductors that has no spurious
solutions, yet provides an accurate fit to all effective masses. The theory is
shown to work in superlattices by direct comparison with first-principles
density-functional calculations of the valence subband structure. A
reinterpretation of the standard data-fitting procedures used in k.p theory is
also proposed.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures; v3: expanded with much new materia
Confinement-induced Berry phase and helicity-dependent photocurrents
The photocurrent in an optically active metal is known to contain a component
that switches sign with the helicity of the incident radiation. At low
frequencies, this current depends on the orbital Berry phase of the Bloch
electrons via the "anomalous velocity" of Karplus and Luttinger. We consider
quantum wells in which the parent material, such as GaAs, is not optically
active and the relevant Berry phase only arises as a result of quantum
confinement. Using an envelope approximation that is supported by numerical
tight-binding results, it is shown that the Berry phase contribution is
determined for realistic wells by a cubic Berry phase intrinsic to the bulk
material, the well width, and the well direction. These results for the
magnitude of the Berry-phase effect suggest that it may already have been
observed in quantum well experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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