Abstract
An intrinsic optical bistability in a double quantum well is described theoretically. The effect is based on the resonant tunneling of electrons against the electric-field force (the counterfield electron transfer) and is driven and controlled by far-ir radiation exciting an intersubband transition. The theory relies on the density-matrix technique and takes into account optical intersubband excitation, interwell tunneling, the relaxation of populations and polarizations, and the mean-field effects of the transferred electron charge (shifts of the levels and changes of matrix elements). Hysteresis-type curves are obtained for both the charge-transfer probability and the optical absorption as functions of the light intensity. The theory shows the effect to be readily observable under realistic conditions, with the exciting-light intensity as low as 50 W/.
- Received 13 May 1993
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.48.10966
©1993 American Physical Society