Near-field autocorrelation spectroscopy of disordered semiconductor quantum wells

Christoph Lienau, Francesca Intonti, Tobias Guenther, Thomas Elsaesser, Vincenzo Savona, Roland Zimmermann, and Erich Runge
Phys. Rev. B 69, 085302 – Published 10 February 2004
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Abstract

Spatially resolved photoluminescence spectra of thin GaAs quantum wells are measured by near-field spectroscopy, and two-energy autocorrelation functions of the spectra are derived. We demonstrate distinctly different autocorrelation functions for a 3-nm-thick quantum well grown on a (311)A surface and for quantum wells grown on (100) substrates. The autocorrelation spectra of the (311)A GaAs quantum well are quantitatively described by a statistical disorder model with a single correlation length of 17 nm for the exciton center-of-mass motion. A shoulder in the autocorrelation spectrum at energies between 1 and 3 meV is identified as a signature of excitonic level repulsion in the disorder potential. In contrast, the characteristic feature in the autocorrelation spectra of the (100) quantum wells is an additional positive correlation peak at energies between 3 and 4 meV. This peak reflects the energy correlations between ground and excited exciton states in individual monolayer islands with a narrow size distribution. The results indicate that the disorder potential in these high-quality (100) GaAs quantum wells contains both contributions from monolayer islands and nanoroughness on a length scale of the exciton Bohr radius.

  • Received 10 July 2003

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.69.085302

©2004 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Christoph Lienau, Francesca Intonti*, Tobias Guenther, and Thomas Elsaesser

  • Max-Born-Institut für Nichtlineare Optik und Kurzzeitspektroskopie, Max-Born-Straße 2A, D-12489 Berlin, Germany

Vincenzo Savona

  • Institute of Theoretical Physics, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne EPFL, Switzerland

Roland Zimmermann

  • Institut für Physik, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Newton-Straße 15, D-12489 Berlin, Germany

Erich Runge

  • Max-Planck-Institut für Physik komplexer Systeme, Nöthnitzer-Straße 38, D-01187 Dresden, Germany

  • *Present address: LENS (Laboratorio Europeo di Spettroscopie non Lineari), I-50019 Sesto Fiorentino (FI), Italy.

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Vol. 69, Iss. 8 — 15 February 2004

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