Low-dimensional semiconductor structures grown by molecular beam epitaxy on a patterned (311)A GaAs substrate are investigated by near-field spectroscopy at a temperature of 10 K. In particular, the two-dimensional potential profiles of quantum wire and coupled wire-dot structures are determined fro
Near-field Optical Spectroscopy of Single GaAs Quantum Wires
✍ Scribed by Richter, A.; S�ptitz, M.; Lienau, Ch.; Elsaesser, T.; Ramsteiner, M.; N�tzel, R.; Ploog, K. H.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 516 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0142-2421
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The nanoscopic room temperature optical properties of single quantum wires are characterized by a combination of near-Ðeld photoluminescence and photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy. Single GaAs quantum wires with a 50 nm lateral dimension are grown at the edge of 15 nm high mesa stripes on patterned GaAs(311) surfaces. Wire formation relies on the preferential migration of Ga atoms from a GaAs layer on the mesa top and bottom towards the sidewall. Spatially resolved photoluminescence spectra separate quantum wire and quantum well emission and image the di †usion of photoexcited carriers into the wires. Photoluminescence excitation spectra give insight into the absorption spectrum of the wires and the spectral position of di †erent interband transitions in the one-dimensional carrier system. They allow the change in local thickness of the GaAs quantum well due to the migration process to be monitored directly with subwavelength spatial resolution. Both the trapping of carriers into the wire and the detrapping of carriers generated within the wire into the surrounding quantum well states are separately resolved.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES