Many-body Effects and the Role of Indirect Excitons in Asymmetric InGaAs/GaAs Double Quantum Wells

ORAL

Abstract

In semiconductor research, a fundamental question is how excitons in nearby but distinct spatial locations interact and exchange energy. In quantum well heterostructures, these interactions can be conveniently probed via optical coherent multidimensional spectroscopy (CMDS). Recently, it has been shown using CMDS that reducing the GaAs barrier from 30 nm to 10 nm between two asymmetric InGaAs quantum wells results in interactions driven by many-body effects. Here, we use the technique to show that for narrower barrier thicknesses, the interactions are accompanied by an emergence of spatially indirect excitons. Quantitative measurements of the effects are presented, which will be useful in tailoring GaAs heterostructure devices, and may also inform the role that excitonic interactions play in more complicated systems like microcavity polariton structures and/or photosynthetic light harvesting complexes.

Authors

  • Christopher Smallwood

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and UC Berkeley, JILA, University of Colorado, NIST

  • Takeshi Suzuki

    Dept. of Physics, University of Michigan

  • Rohan Singh

    Dept. of Physics, University of Michigan

  • Travis Autry

    JILA, University of Colorado, NIST

  • Matthew Day

    JILA, University of Colorado, NIST

  • Fauzia Jabeen

    Laboratory of Quantum Optoelectronics, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)

  • Steven Cundiff

    Dept. of Physics, University of Michigan