1 December 1994 Engineering the exciton linewidth in II-VI quantum well structures
John P. Doran, Fred P. Logue, T. Miyajima, Ross P. Stanley, John F. Donegan, John Hegarty
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Abstract
The excitonic transition in II-VI quantum well materials has recently been used as the basis for optical modulators and also as the lasing transition at low temperatures. The central aspect in the use of the exciton resonance in optical devices is the understanding of the exciton linewidth. We present a detailed study of the interactions that affect the linewidth in II-VI semiconductor quantum well materials. The broadening of the resonance with increasing temperature can be controlled by altering the material parameters of the II-VI structures. In so doing the exciton binding energy can exceed the LO-phonon energy and thereby reduce the homogeneous contribution to the measured linewidth. Efforts to reduce well-width fluctuations in the growth of the II-VI quantum well structures, which are responsible for the inhomogeneous linewidth, must also be made to a limit where the room temperature Iinewidth is narrow and homogeneously broadened.
John P. Doran, Fred P. Logue, T. Miyajima, Ross P. Stanley, John F. Donegan, and John Hegarty "Engineering the exciton linewidth in II-VI quantum well structures," Optical Engineering 33(12), (1 December 1994). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.186842
Published: 1 December 1994
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Excitons

Quantum wells

Absorption

Epitaxial lateral overgrowth

Semiconductors

Phonons

Scattering

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