334 research outputs found
Electron spin relaxation in cubic GaN quantum dots
The spin relaxation time in zinc blende GaN quantum dot is
investigated for different magnetic field, well width and quantum dot diameter.
The spin relaxation caused by the two most important spin relaxation mechanisms
in zinc blende semiconductor quantum dots, {i.e.} the electron-phonon
scattering in conjunction with the Dresselhaus spin-orbit coupling and the
second-order process of the hyperfine interaction combined with the
electron-phonon scattering, are systematically studied. The relative importance
of the two mechanisms are compared in detail under different conditions. It is
found that due to the small spin orbit coupling in GaN, the spin relaxation
caused by the second-order process of the hyperfine interaction combined with
the electron-phonon scattering plays much more important role than it does in
the quantum dot with narrower band gap and larger spin-orbit coupling, such as
GaAs and InAs.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, PRB 79, 2009, in pres
Spin orbit coupling in bulk ZnO and GaN
Using group theory and Kane-like model together with the
L\"owdining partition method, we derive the expressions of spin-orbit coupling
of electrons and holes, including the linear- Rashba term due to the
intrinsic structure inversion asymmetry and the cubic- Dresselhaus term due
to the bulk inversion asymmetry in wurtzite semiconductors. The coefficients of
the electron and hole Dresselhaus terms of ZnO and GaN in wurtzite structure
and GaN in zinc-blende structure are calculated using the nearest-neighbor
and tight-binding models separately.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, to be published in J. Appl. Phy
Dislocation density in GaN determined by photoelectrochemical and hot-wet etching
Defects in GaN layers grown by hydride vapor-phase epitaxy have been investigated by photoelectrochemical ~PEC! etching, and by wet etching in hot H3PO4 acid and molten potassium hydroxide ~KOH!. Threading vertical wires ~i.e., whiskers! and hexagonal-shaped etch pits are formed on the etched sample surfaces by PEC and wet etching, respectively. Using atomic-force
microscopy, we find the density of ‘‘whisker-like’’ features to be 23109 cm22, the same value found for the etch-pit density on samples etched with both H3PO4 and molten KOH. This value is
comparable to the dislocation density obtained in similar samples with tunneling electron microscopy, and is also consistent with the results of Youtsey and co-workers
Ground state of excitons and charged excitons in a quantum well
A variational calculation of the ground state of a neutral exciton and of
positively and negatively charged excitons (trions) in single quantum well is
presented. We study the dependance of the correlation energy and of the binding
energy on the well width and on the hole mass. Our results are are compared
with previous theoretical results and with avalaible experimental data.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures presented to OECS
Large Bychkov-Rashba spin-orbit coupling in high-mobility GaN/AlGaN heterostructures
We present low temperature magnetoconductivity measurements of a
density-tunable and high mobility two-dimensional electron gas confined in the
wide bandgap GaN/AlGaN system. We observed pronounced anti-localization minima
in the low-field conductivity, indicating the presence of strong spin-orbit
coupling. Density dependent measurements of magnetoconductivity indicate that
the coupling is mainly due to the Bychkov-Rashba mechanism. In addition, we
have derived a closed-form expression for the magnetoconductivity, allowing us
to extract reliable transport parameters for our devices. The Rashba spin-orbit
coupling constant is 6 10eVm, while the
conduction band spin-orbit splitting energy amounts to
0.3meV at n=1m.Comment: Accepted for publication in PR
Acceptor Raman scattering in GaAs-AlxGa1-xAs quantum-well structures
We report resonant Raman scattering from Be acceptors in GaAs-AlxGa1-xAs quantum well structures, grown by molecular beam epitaxy. Center- and edge-doped samples with well widths in the range 70-165 A were investigated as a function of temperature and uniaxial stress. The data show confinement-induced shifts and splittings of the lowest-lying acceptor levels in good agreement with recent calculations, and also excitations that may involve impurity states derived from higher subbands. The stress dependence of the spectra reveals coupling of the lowest acceptor transition to transverse acoustic phonons. Confinement-split lines exhibit a not fully understood intensity exchange with increasing temperature.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26808/1/0000364.pd
Influence of symmetry and Coulomb-correlation effects on the optical properties of nitride quantum dots
The electronic and optical properties of self-assembled InN/GaN quantum dots
(QDs) are investigated by means of a tight-binding model combined with
configuration interaction calculations. Tight-binding single particle wave
functions are used as a basis for computing Coulomb and dipole matrix elements.
Within this framework, we analyze multi-exciton emission spectra for two
different sizes of a lens-shaped InN/GaN QD with wurtzite crystal structure.
The impact of the symmetry of the involved electron and hole one-particle
states on the optical spectra is discussed in detail. Furthermore we show how
the characteristic features of the spectra can be interpreted using a
simplified Hamiltonian which provides analytical results for the interacting
multi-exciton complexes. We predict a vanishing exciton and biexciton ground
state emission for small lens-shaped InN/GaN QDs. For larger systems we report
a bright ground state emission but with drastically reduced oscillator
strengths caused by the quantum confined Stark effect.Comment: 15 pages, 17 figure
Growth and Investigation of GaN / AlN Quantum Dots
We have fabricated GaN quantum dots (QDs) in AlN confined layer structures by molecular beam epitaxy. The size distribution and density of the QDs have been estimated from an atomic
force microscopy study. Very high quantum efficiency of photoluminescence (PL) has been obtained in some samples with QDs. Compared to the GaN bulk samples, it increased by orders
of magnitude. In some samples the quantum size effect dominated, resulting in the blue-shift of the QD related PL peak, whereas in the samples with larger dots a red-shift up to 0.8 eV has been observed, which is related to strong polarization effects. We have observed a blue-shift of the PL peak with excitation intensity in the samples with large dots due to screening effect. The temperature-induced quenching of PL occurs at higher temperatures compared to bulk GaN due to the confinement of nonequilibrium carriers in the QDs. An excited state has been observed in some samples
On the origin of interface states at oxide/III-nitride heterojunction interfaces
The energy spectrum of interface state density, D-it(E), was determined at oxide/III-N heterojunction interfaces in the entire band gap, using two complementary photo-electric methods: (i) photo-assisted capacitance-voltage technique for the states distributed near the midgap and the conduction band (CB) and (ii) light intensity dependent photo-capacitance method for the states close to the valence band (VB). In addition, the Auger electron spectroscopy profiling was applied for the characterization of chemical composition of the interface region with the emphasis on carbon impurities, which can be responsible for the interface state creation. The studies were performed for the AlGaN/GaN metal-insulator-semiconductor heterostructures (MISH) with Al2O3 and SiO2 dielectric films and AlxGa1-x layers with x varying from 0.15 to 0.4 as well as for an Al2O3/InAlN/GaN MISH structure. For all structures, it was found that: (i) D-it(E) is an U-shaped continuum increasing from the midgap towards the CB and VB edges and (ii) interface states near the VB exhibit donor-like character. Furthermore, D-it(E) for SiO2/AlxGa1-x/GaN structures increased with rising x. It was also revealed that carbon impurities are not present in the oxide/III-N interface region, which indicates that probably the interface states are not related to carbon, as previously reported. Finally, it was proven that the obtained D-it(E) spectrum can be well fitted using a formula predicted by the disorder induced gap state model. This is an indication that the interface states at oxide/III-N interfaces can originate from the structural disorder of the interfacial region. Furthermore, at the oxide/barrier interface we revealed the presence of the positive fixed charge (Q(F)) which is not related to D-it(E) and which almost compensates the negative polarization charge (Q(pol)(-))
Comparative studies of efficiency droop in polar and non-polar InGaN quantum wells
We report on a comparative study of efficiency droop in polar and non-polar InGaN quantum well structures at T = 10 K. To ensure that the experiments were carried out with identical carrier densities for any particular excitation power density, we used laser pulses of duration ∼100 fs at a repetition rate of 400 kHz. For both types of structures, efficiency droop was observed to occur for carrier densities of above 7 × 1011 cm−2 pulse−1 per quantum well; also both structures exhibited similar spectral broadening in the droop regime. These results show that efficiency droop is intrinsic in InGaN quantum wells, whether polar or non-polar, and is a function, specifically, of carrier density.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Grant IDs: EP\J001627\1 and EP\J003603\1)This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from AIP Publishing via http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.495423
- …