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Physica B 314 (2002) 263–267 Ultrafast carrier dynamics of resonantly excited 1.3-mm InAs/GaAs self-assembled quantum dots F. Quochia,*, M. Dinua, N.H. Bonadeoa, J. Shaha, L.N. Pfeifferb, K.W. Westb, P.M. Platzmanb a Lucent Technologies, Bell Laboratories, 101 Crawfords Corner Road, Holmdel, NJ 07733, USA b Lucent Technologies, Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ 07940, USA Abstract We report the carrier dynamics of 1.3-mm InAs quantum dots (QDs), following resonant excitation in the lowest energy state of QDs. The strong temperature dependence of the escape rates of the carriers leaving the ground state shows the presence of efficient multiphonon processes, involving both acoustic and optical phonons. The very fast activation of electrons to the first excited state implies that, in these QDs, the phonon bottleneck is not observable at room temperature even at low carrier densities where the dynamics is independent of excitation level. r 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: Self-assembled quantum dots; Phonon bottleneck; Ultrafast carrier dynamics Self-assembled InAs quantum dots (QDs) have been extensively investigated in the last few years (for a recent review see Ref. [1]). Three-dimensional confinement in these nanostructures profoundly modifies the intrinsic physical processes that dominate carrier dynamics and relaxation compared to higher dimensional systems. Due to the discrete electronic states with large energy separation, it has been predicted that efficient carrier relaxation is possible only between states whose energy difference is close to (a multiple of) longitudinal optical phonon (LO) energy [2]. However, until very recently, the so-called phonon bottleneck has not been observed in QDs. Many mechanisms that circumvent the phonon bottleneck have been proposed to explain the experimental results. A very recent experiment has *Corresponding author. Fax: +1-732-949-2473. E-mail address: [email protected] (F. Quochi). revealed the presence of the phonon bottleneck in self-assembled quantum dots at low temperatures (B40 K) [3]. In this paper, we report measurements of the depopulation dynamics of the lowest electronic states of the quantum dots and the dynamics of the first excited electronic states, following resonant excitation in the lowest states by a subpicosecond optical pulse, using differential transmission and upconversion luminescence techniques. Photoluminescence (PL) studies are sensitive to the product of the electron and hole occupation functions fe fh ; while differential transmission (DT=T) is sensitive to the sum fe þ fh ; thus allowing distinction between thermal activation rates for electrons and holes. The self-assembled InAs/GaAs QDs are fabricated by molecular beam epitaxy on a GaAs substrate [4]. Sample #1 (#2) consists of two (four) stacks of three (two) QD layers each, designed to 0921-4526/02/$ - see front matter r 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PII: S 0 9 2 1 - 4 5 2 6 ( 0 1 ) 0 1 3 8 3 - 7 F. Quochi et al. / Physica B 314 (2002) 263–267 PL 1E-5 ∆T/T τh~1 ps 1E-6 DT τe~70 ps 0.0 0.2 (b) 0.1 1 τr~600 ps 0.4 0.6 Time [ns] (a) 5 4 3 2 1 0 0.92 0.96 1.00 Energy [eV] 90 80 70 60 50 40 τ e(ps) emit near 1.3 mm at room temperature. Each QD layer consists of a seed InAs layer followed by a 6period GaAs/InAs superlattice. The QD layers ( of within a stack are separated by 200 (4 0 0) A ( of GaAs, and the stacks are separated by E1500 A GaAs. From transmission electron microscopy, we estimate a QD density ntot B324 1010 cm2 per layer. The QDs have a base length bB30 nm and a height hB10 nm. High-excitation PL spectra show evidence of three electron and hole confined states and confirm the high quality of the QDs. The DT=T measurements are performed using 150 fs pulses from an optical parametric oscillator (pumped by a Ti:Sapphire laser), tuned to the lowest interband transition energy of the QDs in the standard degenerate pump-probe configuration with orthogonally linearly polarized pump and probe fields. The high sensitivity (B107) required to perform low-density measurements is achieved by combining high-frequency modulation (0.5–1.5 MHz) and lock-in detection with balanced detection. The lattice temperature is varied in the range 10–400 K. Time-resolved PL data at room temperature are obtained using a standard upconversion PL setup. The PL signal is excited by a linearly polarized 150 fs pulse and the emission is collected by a Cassegrain reflector, focused onto a 1-mm thick LiIO3 nonlinear crystal, upconverted using a residual beam from the Ti:Sapphire laser, then dispersed in a double spectrometer and detected by a low-noise GaAs photomultiplier. The excitation spot size (1/e2 diameter) used in the pump-probe (PL) experiment is 70 (60) mm. Fig. 1a depicts the room temperature resonant DT=T dynamics of sample #1 versus pump-probe time delay. The positive sign of the DT=T signal indicates bleaching of absorption due to state filling by photoexcitation. The observed recovery of absorption results from depopulation of these states by various processes. The right inset shows the peak DT=T signal versus laser wavelength, together with the nonresonantly excited cw PL spectrum. The spectra show that the DT=T signal arises from the lowest QD interband transition. The temporal decay can be fitted quite well by a three-component exponential decay (solid curve in Fig. 1): ultrafast (th B0:8 ps), fast (te B70 ps) and slow (tr B600 ps). The slow component has been τh(ps) 264 0.8 Γ12 Γ21 2 e 1e Γ20 Γ10 1h 2h -2 n ex/n tot(10 ) 1.0 (c) WL QD WL Fig. 1. (a) Resonant DT=T dynamics of sample #1 at room temperature. The solid curve is the fit to the data of a threecomponent exponential decay. Inset: PL and DT=T spectra at T ¼ 290 K. The laser spectral width (FWHM) is B11 nm. (b) Hole ði ¼ h, squares) and electron ði ¼ e; dotsÞ activation rates 1=ti versus fractional occupation n of the QDs ðn ¼ nex =ntot Þ: (c) Energy level diagram for electrons (e) and holes (h). G10 and G20 are the recombination rates. G12 and G21 are the rates between levels 1 and 2. studied extensively in the past (see, for instance Ref. [5]) and is attributed to carrier recombination. The ultrafast ð1=th Þ and the fast ð1=te Þ rates are attributed to the activation of holes and electrons, respectively.1 Fig. 1b shows that te and th are independent of the pump intensity over almost two orders of magnitude in excitation. DT=T curves versus pump-probe delay are measured at the resonance peak for different lattice temperatures at the excitation intensity Iex ¼ 25 W/cm2. Given a0 dE3:5 104 per layer [6], we estimate a fractional (average) occupation per dot n ¼ nex =ntot E0:0251 (regardless of spin). The decay times te and th ; as well as their relative amplitudes, change dramatically from 60 to 350 K. The fits to the data reveal that te changes from 1 Since the hole levels of the QDs have smaller energy separations than the electron levels, we assume that the holes are activated to their QD excited states faster than the electrons. F. Quochi et al. / Physica B 314 (2002) 263–267 E20 ps at 400 K to 400 ps at 200 K, whereas th changes from E0.8 ps at 300 K to 20 ps at 60 K. The dependence of the rates 1/te and 1=th on temperature is shown in Fig. 2a and b. We have performed model calculations on the basis of a two-level (2+2) system for electrons and holes (see Fig. 1c for details), assuming that the carriers are scattered within each QD. A simple rate equation analysis allows us to write 1=th and 1=te in terms of the intrinsic phonon rates G12 ; G21 between the two lowest QD electron and hole levels. As is evident from Fig. 2, single LO phonon processes cannot reproduce the temperature dependence of the escape rates; LO7LA (longitudinal acoustic) processes fail to fit the model temperature dependence to the data as well. In order to reproduce the steep temperature dependence we consider LO7m LA phonon processes. Good fit to the data is obtained by using LO2LA and LO+4LA phonon processes for 1=th and 1=te ; respectively (Fig. 2).2 Distinct distributions of dots with different recombination rates and phonon-assisted interdot carrier migration processes are negligible because the relative amplitudes of the three components are independent of wavelength across the inhomogeneously broadened spectrum. Most Augermediated activation processes can be eliminated at these low excitation intensities because depopulation times are independent of the pump intensities (Fig. 1b), and also due to the strong temperature dependence (Fig. 2). Electron–hole scattering involving a single electron and a single hole may occur within a QD [7]. In this process, one of the carriers is excited by a different activation process (e.g., thermal activation by phonon absorption). The other carrier can then be excited to a higher level by de-exciting the first carrier to a lower level. From the point of view of the ground-state depopulation dynamics, this process does not seem to be very important. In fact, if the electrons were activated by electron– hole scattering, 1=te and 1=th would be expected 2 In the temperature range of the experiment, we can assume that kBT>ELA, where ELA is the largest LA phonon energy involved in the process. This allows us to have only one adjustable fit parameter (the multiphonon rate amplitude). 265 Fig. 2. Electron (a) and hole (b) activation rates 1=te and 1=th versus inverse temperature (sample #1). The dashed, dotted and solid curves are the best fit for a single LO, LO+LA, and LO7m LA phonon scattering processes, respectively. to have (almost) the same temperature dependence. In view of the above considerations and of the fits of the rates 1/th and 1/te for different temperatures, we infer that carriers are scattered to higher energy states (either inside or outside the QDs) by intrinsic multiphonon scattering processes. To directly access the carrier dynamics in the excited states we study the time-resolved PL signal from the first-excited interband transition following resonant excitation in the lowest interband transition. Since the holes are thermally activated very rapidly, the excited-state PL signal rise time almost corresponds to the electron activation time. Upconversion PL measurements are performed at room temperature in sample #2 which has 8 QD layers and thus is more efficient. Fig. 3a shows the PL spectrum of the QDs, upconverted 60 ps after excitation, for the excitation intensity Iex ¼ 1:1 kW/cm2 ðn ¼ 0:85Þ: Time-resolved PL profiles for different Iex values are displayed in Fig. 3b, and an exponential growth function is fitted to the time profiles.3 The fit PL rise time versus Iex is plotted in Fig. 3c. The numbers in brackets are the values of n; which are derived assuming that the optical absorption scales 3 The PL dynamics at long times is characterized by a recombination decay time tr B600 ps (not shown). F. Quochi et al. / Physica B 314 (2002) 263–267 2 6E-4 2 3.5 1.8 60 40 20 0.7 PL rise time (ps) 1100 1200 1300 (a) wavelength (nm) (c) 20 (0.42) 10 0 1000 100 10 1 4E-4 ∆ T/T 1.1 kW/cm ∆ t = 60 ps 7.6 PL signal (cps) PL signal (a.u.) Iex (kW/cm ) τi (ps) 266 τr τe (0.20) 0.2 2E-4 (0.90) τh 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 2 exc. intensity (kW/cm ) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 time (ps) (b) 0.52 kW/cm 1E-4 (0.81) (0.41) 0 200 400 600 2 800 delay time (ps) (0.55) (1.0) 4 0 2 excitation intensity (kW/cm ) Fig. 3. Room temperature PL dynamics of sample #2. (a) PL spectrum excited at the lowest QD transition wavelength (1270 nm), upconverted 60 ps after excitation. (b) PL time traces at the first-excited QD transition wavelength (1170 nm) for different excitation intensity ðIex Þ values. Solid lines are exponential growth fits to the data. (c) PL rise time versus Iex : The numbers in brackets represent the fractional occupation per dot, n: The dashed lines are guides to the eye. linearly with Iex : The arrows marks the excitation power for which n ¼ 1:4 The PL rise time increases with decreasing Iex ; and for Iex o1 kW/cm2 ðno0:8Þ tends to a constant value of about 14 ps. Since thermal relaxation is always faster than thermal activation, this result qualitatively suggests that the phonon bottleneck is always circumvented even at low carrier densities where carrier dynamics is intensity independent. The activation dynamics to the first excited state with a characteristic time of 14 ps is in contrast with the ground-state depopulation dynamics observed in sample #1. To check the overall consistency of our experimental results, we performed room temperature resonant DT=T measurements on sample #2 also, in the same excitation regime as for the PL measurements ðno1Þ: The results are qualitatively in agreement with those obtained in sample #1: a threecomponent exponential decay fit to the DT=T traces gives th B0:8 ps, te B120 ps, and tr B900 ps 4 We remark that in our case of resonant excitation in the lower QD interband transition, the linear extrapolation always overestimates the actual value of n due to absorption saturation by state filling. Fig. 4. Resonant DT=T dynamics of sample #2 at room temperature for Iex ¼ 0:52 kW/cm2: Experimental data (dots), three-component exponential decay fit to the data (solid line). Inset: Fit decay times ti (i=h, e, r) versus Iex : Numbers in brackets are same as in Fig. 3c. (see main panel of Fig. 4). The recombination time tr ; which is longer in sample #2 than in sample #1, in fact agrees with the PL decay time in the ground state (not shown). The inset shows that th ; te ; tr are independent of Iex in the regime of interest ðno1Þ; which is consistent with the constancy of the PL rise time for no1: The comparison between the PL and the DT=T data suggests that thermally activated electrons can reach various final states. Since a decay with a characteristic time of 14 ps is not clearly identifiable in the DT=T traces, we infer that most electrons leaving the ground state are scattered to either highly excited states of the QDs or the wetting layer, or defect states surrounding the QDs. Additional investigations are required to fully understand the carrier dynamics. In summary, we report carrier dynamics of 1.3mm InAs/GaAs QDs studied by subpicosecond pump-probe and photoluminescence spectroscopy with resonant excitation in the lowest QD interband optical transition. We observe very fast electron activation times from which we deduce that the phonon bottleneck is not observable at room temperature even at low carrier densities where the dynamics is independent of excitation level. References [1] D. Bimberg, M. Grundmann, N.N. Ledentsov, in: Quantum Dot Heterostructures, Wiley, London, 1999. F. Quochi et al. / Physica B 314 (2002) 263–267 [2] U. Bockelmann, Phys. Rev. B 48 (1993) 17637. [3] J. Urayama, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 86 (2001) 4930. [4] J. Bloch, et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 77 (2000) 2545. [5] M. Paillard, et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 76 (2000) 76. [6] D. Birkedal, et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 77 (2000) 2201. [7] T.S. Sosnowski, et al., Phys. Rev. B 57 (1998) R9423. 267