AI Article Synopsis

  • The research evaluates Al-doped ZnO (AZO) as a transparent gate material, finding it enhances quantum dot emission intensity over traditional Ti gates, while also noting issues with charge artifacts at higher gate voltages.
  • It also explores switching behaviors in GaAs cone-shell quantum dots (CSQDs) under vertical electric fields, observing localized charge carrier densities and minimal interference from interface charges at low voltages.
  • The findings reveal a new asymmetric strong-weak confinement in quantum dots, where the hole transitions from strong to weak confinement while the electron remains strongly confined, supporting theoretical predictions regarding hole probability densities.

Article Abstract

The first part of this work evaluates Al-doped ZnO (AZO) as an optically transparent top-gate material for studies on semiconductor quantum dots. In comparison with conventional Ti gates, samples with AZO gates demonstrate a more than three times higher intensity in the quantum dot emission under comparable excitation conditions. On the other hand, charges inside a process-induced oxide layer at the interface to the semiconductor cause artifacts at gate voltages above U≈ 1 V. The second part describes an optical and simulation study of a vertical electric-field ()-induced switching from a strong to an asymmetric strong-weak confinement in GaAs cone-shell quantum dots (CSQDs), where the charge carrier probability densities are localized on the surface of a cone. These experiments are performed at low and show no indications of an influence of interface charges. For a large , the measured radiative lifetimes are substantially shorter compared with simulation results. We attribute this discrepancy to an -induced transformation of the shape of the hole probability density. In detail, an increasing pushes the hole into the wing part of a CSQD, where it forms a quantum ring. Accordingly, the confinement of the hole is changed from strong, which is assumed in the simulations, to weak, where the local radius is larger than the bulk exciton Bohr radius. In contrast to the hole, an increasing pushes the electron into the CSQD tip, where it remains in a strong confinement. This means the radiative lifetime for large is given by an asymmetric confinement with a strongly confined electron and a hole in a weak confinement. To our knowledge, this asymmetric strong-weak confinement represents a novel kind of quantum mechanical confinement and has not been observed so far. Furthermore, the observed weak confinement for the hole represents a confirmation of the theoretically predicted transformation of the hole probability density from a quantum dot into a quantum ring. For such quantum rings, application as storage for photo-excited charge carriers is predicted, which can be interesting for future quantum photonic integrated circuits.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11547971PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano14211712DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The research evaluates Al-doped ZnO (AZO) as a transparent gate material, finding it enhances quantum dot emission intensity over traditional Ti gates, while also noting issues with charge artifacts at higher gate voltages.
  • It also explores switching behaviors in GaAs cone-shell quantum dots (CSQDs) under vertical electric fields, observing localized charge carrier densities and minimal interference from interface charges at low voltages.
  • The findings reveal a new asymmetric strong-weak confinement in quantum dots, where the hole transitions from strong to weak confinement while the electron remains strongly confined, supporting theoretical predictions regarding hole probability densities.
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