Nuclear Spin System in GaAs—Cooling, Relaxation and Spin Temperature Concept

Abstract

International audienceCooling of nuclear spins in doped semiconductors via their dynamic polarization by optical pumping is a powerful method for harnessing ubiquitous fluctuations of nuclear spin, which constitute a well-known decoherence channel for the electronic spins. The idea of spin cooling is based on the hypothesis of spin temperature, which states that nuclear spin system (NSS) reaches an internal thermal equilibrium long before it comes to equilibrium with the external bath (crystal lattice). Although thermodynamic framework has been successfully employed for the description of a variety of the experimental data, a rigorous check of this concept in semiconductors was impossible until recently, in particular at low magnetic field. The reason for that is the lack of experimental techniques allowing nonperturbative optical control over adiabatic transformation of the NSS.We have recently developed such methods, based on off-resonant Faraday rotation and spin noise spectroscopy [1, 2]. Using these techniques, combined with dark-interval photoluminescence spectroscopy, we established a comprehensive picture of the nuclear spin relaxation efficiency, its magnetic field, temperature, and carrier concentration dependence in doped GaAs, a model system in the field of nuclear spin physics in semiconductors [3-5]. We also analyzed the interplay between four relevant relaxation mechanisms: hyperfine interaction, quadrupole interaction, spin diffusion and Korringa mechanisms.Understanding of field dependence of NSS dynamics allowed us to obtain a new insight into the NSS thermodynamics, and verify the spin temperature concept in GaAs bulk material and microcavities [6]. We have demonstrated, that NSS exactly follows the predictions of the spin temperature theory, despite the quadrupole interaction that was earlier reported to disrupt nuclear spin thermalization in quantum dots [7]. Our results open a way for the deep cooling of nuclear spins in semiconductor structures, with the prospect of realizing nuclear spin-ordered states for high-fidelity spin-photon interfaces.This work is supported by a joint grant of the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (RFBR, Grant No. 16-52-041301-4 and National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS, PRC SPINCOOL No. 148362)References:[1] R. Giri et al, Physical Review Letters, 111, 087603 (2013)[2] I. I. Ryzhov et al, Applied Physics Letters, 106, 242405 (2015)[3] M. Kotur et al, Physical Review B, 94(8), 081201 (2016)[4] M. Vladimirova et al, Physical Review B, 95, 125312 (2017)[5] M. Kotur et al, eprint arXiv:1802.05013 (2018)[6] M. Vladimirova et al, Physical Review B, 97, 041301 (2018)[7] P. Maletinsky et al, Nature Physics, 5, 407 (2009

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