We report a comprehensive discussion of quantum interference effects due to the finite structure of excitons in quantum rings and their first experimental corroboration observed in the optical recombinations. Anomalous features that appear in the experiments are analyzed according to theoretical models that describe the modulation of the interference pattern by temperature and built-in electric fields.PACS numbers: 71.35.Ji, 73.21.La, 78.20.Ls, 78.67.Hc The nanoscale ring structures, or quantum rings (QRs), have attracted the interest of the scientific community due to their unique rotational symmetry and the possibility to verify quantum mechanical phenomena.[1, 2, 3] Among these, the study of Aharonov-Bohm (AB)-like effects has gained a significant impetus, [4,5,6] and these efforts have gone beyond the original discussion of the AB interpretation on the nature of electromagnetic potentials and their role in quantum mechanics. [7] It is reasonable to say that the study of coherent interference occurring in transport properties of nanoscopic QRs, as proposed in Ref. 7 encounters, at the moment, serious scale limitations which has encouraged the search for optical implications associated to AB-effects.These endeavors applied to nanoscopic QRs do not strictly meet the original conditions for the ABconfiguration since the carriers are confined within regions with finite values of magnetic field. However, we still consider an observed effect as of AB-type if it can be explained assuming that the magnetic field is ideally concentrated in the middle of the QRs, i. e., when such effect comes essentially from potential vector-mediated quantum interference. As also considered in Ref. 8, in stationary systems this interference is generally reflected in a boundary condition and it is not as explicit as in the famous picture of an AB scattering situation.In this work we consider AB-interference in excitonic states as proposed theoretically in Refs. 9, 10, 12. Instead of looking only at the oscillatory dependence on magnetic flux of the electron-hole (e − h) recombination energy during photo-luminescence (PL), we also consider the excitonic oscillator strength whose oscillatory behavior reflects directly the changes in the exciton wavefunction as the magnetic flux increases. A similar experimental work was reported in Ref. 6 for type-II QRs, however, here we study type-I systems where both electron and hole move in the ring so that the correlation between them is crucial to the oscillatory behavior found in the PL integrated intensity. The samples studied here were grown using a RIBER 32P solid-source molecular beam epitaxy chamber and the QRs were grown using the following procedure. A 0.5 µm GaAs buffer layer was grown on semi-insulating (100) GaAs substrates at 580• C, after oxide desorption. Then, it was followed by 2.2 ML of InAs and the formation of quantum dots (QDs) at 520• C. The dots were obtained using the Stranski-Krastanov growth mode. Cycles of 0.14 ML of InAs plus a 2 s interruption under As 2 flux were r...
The evolution between lattice-matched GaAs/Al0.3Ga0.7As single and double ring-like nanostructures is studied, with an emphasis on the construction and destruction of the observed outer ring. Using droplet epitaxy, this was achieved by directly controlling the Ga surface diffusion on GaAs(100). Double ring-like nanostructures were observed at relatively low temperatures under a fixed As4 flux (beam equivalent pressure (BEP) of 6.4 µTorr) and at a fixed temperature under a high As4 flux. The construction of the outer ring can be controlled through surface diffusion by varying the substrate temperature or the As4 flux. Single ring-like nanostructures were realized both at relatively high temperatures under a fixed As4 flux, and at low temperatures under a relatively low As4 flux.
Using (100) GaAs substrates as a reference, we present a study of the formation of Ga droplets on (311)A and (511)A GaAs substrates in which the effect of both the substrate temperature and the amount of Ga supplied on the droplet density and height for the three different surfaces have been investigated. Droplets on (100) substrates show a round shape; however, they appear as elongated balls with tails along the [Formula: see text] direction of the (311)A substrate and the [Formula: see text] direction of the (511)A substrate. It has been found that the Ga droplets on (511)A surfaces have lower densities and higher heights than those on (100) substrates. In contrast, Ga droplets on (311)A surfaces have lower heights and much higher densities compared to those for both (100) and (511)A. We observed that the decrease in the droplet density with increasing growth temperature for both (311)A and (511)A is more than twice that for the (100)GaAs surface due to the larger drop in the nucleation rate. Based on these observations, we offer a physical explanation based on the thermodynamics and the anisotropy of the high-index surfaces.
We demonstrate a number of unseen self-assembled nanostructure complexes fabricated on various GaAs surface indexes by droplet epitaxy. Even under identical growth conditions, the configuration of nanostructure complexes is distinctive on each surface. The morphology evolution of nanostructure complexes is kinetically and energetically analyzed in determining the correlation between shape of nanostructure complexes and atomic surface matrixes with atomic ball−stick models. By systematically varying growth environment, we report many uncanny nanostructure complexes on given surface indexes.
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