In dilute nitrides [e.g., Ga(AsN), (InGa)(AsN)] the formation of stable N-2H-H complexes following H irradiation removes the effects nitrogen has on the optical (i.e., refractive index [1]), structural [2], and electronic [3] properties of the material. In particular, H binding to N atoms in GaAs<inf>1-x</inf>N<inf>x</inf> leads to an increase in the band gap energy of the N-containing material (~1.33 eV for x = 1% at T = 5 K) up to the value it has in GaAs (1.52 eV at 5 K). Therefore, by allowing H incorporation only in selected regions of the sample - e.g., by deposition of H-opaque masks prior to the hydrogenation - it is possible to attain a spatially controlled modulation of the band gap energy in the growth plane. This technique, referred to as in-plane Band Gap Engineering, can be employed to tailor the carrier-confining potential down to a nm scale, resulting in the fabrication of site-controlled, dilute nitride-based quantum dots (QDs). We demonstrate here that such QDs emit single photons on demand, as revealed by measuring the second-order correlation function of the single-exciton emission [4].Coupled to the possibility of erasing/rewriting the fabricated patterns through multiple annealing/hydrogenation procedures, the inherently precise control over the position of the nanostructures fabricated with this method renders them naturally suited for the integration with photonic crystal nanocavities.

Single photon emitters in dilute nitrides: Towards a determinist approach of quantum dot-photonic crystal nanocavity coupling

Gerardino A;Pettinari G;Businaro L;
2015

Abstract

In dilute nitrides [e.g., Ga(AsN), (InGa)(AsN)] the formation of stable N-2H-H complexes following H irradiation removes the effects nitrogen has on the optical (i.e., refractive index [1]), structural [2], and electronic [3] properties of the material. In particular, H binding to N atoms in GaAs1-xNx leads to an increase in the band gap energy of the N-containing material (~1.33 eV for x = 1% at T = 5 K) up to the value it has in GaAs (1.52 eV at 5 K). Therefore, by allowing H incorporation only in selected regions of the sample - e.g., by deposition of H-opaque masks prior to the hydrogenation - it is possible to attain a spatially controlled modulation of the band gap energy in the growth plane. This technique, referred to as in-plane Band Gap Engineering, can be employed to tailor the carrier-confining potential down to a nm scale, resulting in the fabrication of site-controlled, dilute nitride-based quantum dots (QDs). We demonstrate here that such QDs emit single photons on demand, as revealed by measuring the second-order correlation function of the single-exciton emission [4].Coupled to the possibility of erasing/rewriting the fabricated patterns through multiple annealing/hydrogenation procedures, the inherently precise control over the position of the nanostructures fabricated with this method renders them naturally suited for the integration with photonic crystal nanocavities.
2015
Istituto di fotonica e nanotecnologie - IFN
9781467378802
Dilute nitrides
Photonic crystal nanocavities
Quantum dots
Site-controlled nanostructures
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/347685
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