| Literature DB >> 24500329 |
G Sallen1, S Kunz1, T Amand1, L Bouet1, T Kuroda2, T Mano2, D Paget3, O Krebs4, X Marie1, K Sakoda2, B Urbaszek1.
Abstract
Optical and electrical control of the nuclear spin system allows enhancing the sensitivity of NMR applications and spin-based information storage and processing. Dynamic nuclear polarization in semiconductors is commonly achieved in the presence of a stabilizing external magnetic field. Here we report efficient optical pumping of nuclear spins at zero magnetic field in strain-free GaAs quantum dots. The strong interaction of a single, optically injected electron spin with the nuclear spins acts as a stabilizing, effective magnetic field (Knight field) on the nuclei. We optically tune the Knight field amplitude and direction. In combination with a small transverse magnetic field, we are able to control the longitudinal and transverse components of the nuclear spin polarization in the absence of lattice strain--that is, in dots with strongly reduced static nuclear quadrupole effects, as reproduced by our model calculations.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24500329 PMCID: PMC3926008 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Dynamic nuclear polarization at zero applied field.
(a) Hyperfine interaction between a single electron and the nuclear spins of the quantum dot lattice. (b) Circular polarization degree of emission (error ±1% included in symbol height) of neutral exciton X0 (squares) and charged excitons X+ (triangles) and X− (circles) as a function of excitation laser power using σ+ polarization. (c) Energy difference between σ+ and σ− polarized emission for X+ (triangles) and X− (circles): Overhauser shift ∝ average nuclear spin ‹Iz›. Error bars correspond to spectral precision (d) X+PL spectra σ+ (triangles) and σ−(circles) polarized at max. laser power. (e) Overhauser shift as a function of the measured X+ PL polarization with varying laser excitation polarization at constant power of 2 μW. Error bars correspond to spectral precision.
Orders of magnitude of main nuclear spin interactions in III–V semiconductors.
| 250 | ~0 | ≤1 | |
| ≤0.3 | 0.3 | ≤0.3 | |
| 1 | 0.05 | 15 | |
| 0.15 | 0.15 | 0.15 |
QD, quantum dot.
*Taken from refs 1, 16, 20, 42, 45.
†Taken from refs 1, 15, 45, 46.
‡This work and BL from ref. 1.
Figure 2Knight field determination and tuning.
(a) X+ Overhauser shift as a function of the applied field Bz. Circles (squares) for σ−(σ+) laser polarization, triangles for elliptically polarized laser excitation. The magnetic field Bz, for which this dip occurs, is a measure of the Knight field amplitude. Error bars are given by spectral precision. (b) Knight field amplitudes extracted by fitting Gaussians to data in a for three typical dots (X+ transitions for QDs five and 6B, X+ (solid squares) and X− (hollow diamond) transitions for QD B), demonstrating Knight field tuning. The data show a roughly linear dependence as Be∝‹S›∝(−/2), typical error bars due to precision of fitting procedure are indicated.
Figure 3Hanle measurements under optical pumping conditions.
(a) Circular polarization degree of the PL emission as a function of the applied transverse magnetic field. Measurement (black circles) at low laser power (13 nW). Red line: Lorentzian fit. (b) Overhauser shift≃0—that is, there is no measurable DNP. (c) Same measurement as a but using higher laser excitation power (1.2 μW). (d) Strong Overhauser shift under high excitation power. (e) Calculated Hanle depolarization curve using equation 8—see Methods; (f) calculated longitudinal Overhauser field (black line) using equation 7 and transverse nuclear field (blue line). The compensation points where Bn,Y+BY=0 are marked by green circles. Red line: −BY. (g) Spin temperature within ellipsoids of equal electron probability density in the dot. (h) Effective and applied magnetic fields acting on electron and nuclear spin systems for one iso-Knight shell—see Methods.