Crystal Phase Quantum Dots in the Ultrathin Core of GaAs-AlGaAs Core-Shell Nanowires.

Journal: Nano Letters
Published:
Abstract

Semiconductor quantum dots embedded in nanowires (NW-QDs) can be used as efficient sources of nonclassical light with ultrahigh brightness and indistinguishability, needed for photonic quantum information technologies. Although most NW-QDs studied so far focus on heterostructure-type QDs that provide an effective electronic confinement potential using chemically distinct regions with dissimilar electronic structure, homostructure NWs can localize excitons at crystal phase defects in leading to NW-QDs. Here, we optically investigate QD emitters embedded in GaAs-AlGaAs core-shell NWs, where the excitons are confined in an ultrathin-diameter NW core and localized along the axis of the NW core at wurtzite (WZ)/zincblende (ZB) crystal phase defects. Photoluminescence (PL)-excitation measurements performed on the QD-emission reveal sharp resonances arising from excited electronic states of the axial confinement potential. The QD-like nature of the emissive centers are suggested by the observation of a narrow PL line width, as low as ~300 μeV, and confirmed by the observation of clear photon antibunching in autocorrelation measurements. Most interestingly, time-resolved PL measurements reveal a very short radiative lifetime <1 ns, indicative of a transition from a type-II to type-I band alignment of the WZ/ZB crystal interface in GaAs due to the strong quantum confinement in the ultrathin NW core.

Authors
Bernhard Loitsch, Julia Winnerl, Gianluca Grimaldi, Jakob Wierzbowski, Daniel Rudolph, Stefanie Morkötter, Markus Döblinger, Gerhard Abstreiter, Gregor Koblmüller, Jonathan Finley