The Photorefractive Properties of Quantum-Confined Excitons,

Abstract

Multiple-quantum-well structures in semiconductors have strong spatial inhomogeneity. Bandgaps in these multilayer samples vary by several tenths of eV over monolayer distances. These dramatic spatial changes in band structure have significant consequences for the photorefractive effect, creating new effects that have no analog in bulk photorefractive materials. The ability to design new materials and devices, and control desired photorefractive properties, has few limitations. Several processes give photorefractive quantum well structures unique advantages. Two charge separation processes, in particular, contribute to the novel effects: (1) bandgap energies can be selectively tuned to isolate optical absorption to some layers, but not others; (2) carriers in quantum wells tunnel into barrier regions with larger bandgaps, generating metastable defect occupancies with associated electric fields. These processes couple with one of the strongest advantages of quantum well structures: quantum-confined excitons. Quantum-confined excitons in semiconductors exhibit large quadratic electro-optic effects. The quadratic electro-optic effect combines with the charge separation processes to yield ultra-high sensitivity photorefractive effects with large diffraction efficiencies and beam coupling gains. In this paper, we present the theory of photorefractive effects in quantum well structures, concentrating on the role of spatial inhomogeneity in the nonlinear optical behavior.

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 22, 1992
Accession Number
ADP006702

Entities

People

  • D. D. Nolte
  • M. R. Melloch

Organizations

  • Purdue University

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Advanced Electronics

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Band Structures
  • Electric Fields
  • Energy Bands
  • Materials
  • Monomolecular Films
  • Optical Absorption
  • Photorefractive Materials
  • Quantum Wells
  • Semiconductors

Fields of Study

  • Materials science

Readers

  • Optical Physics and Photonics.
  • Semiconductor Device Technology

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics
  • Quantum Computing