Temperature-dependent fine structure splitting in InGaN quantum dots

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Abstract

We report the experimental observation of temperature-dependent fine structure splitting in semiconductor quantum dots using a non-polar (11-20) a-plane InGaN system, up to the on-chip Peltier cooling threshold of 200 K. At 5 K, a statistical average splitting of 443 ± 132 μeV has been found based on 81 quantum dots. The degree of fine structure splitting stays relatively constant for temperatures less than 100 K and only increases above that temperature. At 200 K, we find that the fine structure splitting ranges between 2 and 12 meV, which is an order of magnitude higher than that at low temperatures. Our investigations also show that phonon interactions at high temperatures might have a correlation with the degree of exchange interactions. The large fine structure splitting at 200 K makes it easier to isolate the individual components of the polarized emission spectrally, increasing the effective degree of polarization for potential on-chip applications of polarized single-photon sources.

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Wang, T., Puchtler, T. J., Zhu, T., Jarman, J. C., Kocher, C. C., Oliver, R. A., & Taylor, R. A. (2017). Temperature-dependent fine structure splitting in InGaN quantum dots. Applied Physics Letters, 111(5). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4996861

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