| Literature DB >> 27058255 |
Petr Stepanov1,2, Marta Elzo-Aizarna1,3,4, Joël Bleuse1,2, Nitin S Malik1,2, Yoann Curé1,2, Eric Gautier1,5, Vincent Favre-Nicolin1,3,6, Jean-Michel Gérard1,2, Julien Claudon1,2.
Abstract
We introduce a calibration method to quantify the impact of external mechanical stress on the emission wavelength of distinct quantum dots (QDs). Specifically, these emitters are integrated in a cross-section of a semiconductor core wire and experience a longitudinal strain that is induced by an amorphous capping shell. Detailed numerical simulations show that, thanks to the shell mechanical isotropy, the strain in the core is uniform, which enables a direct comparison of the QD responses. Moreover, the core strain is determined in situ by an optical measurement, yielding reliable values for the QD emission tuning slope. This calibration technique is applied to self-assembled InAs QDs submitted to incremental elongation along their growth axis. In contrast to recent studies conducted on similar QDs submitted to a uniaxial stress perpendicular to the growth direction, optical spectroscopy reveals up to ten times larger tuning slopes, with a moderate dispersion. These results highlight the importance of the stress direction to optimize the QD optical shift, with general implications, both in static and dynamic regimes. As such, they are in particular relevant for the development of wavelength-tunable single-photon sources or hybrid QD opto-mechanical systems.Entities:
Keywords: Quantum dot; core−shell nanowire; elastic tuning; hybrid opto-mechanics; photoluminescence; quantum optics
Year: 2016 PMID: 27058255 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b00678
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189