Emission and elastic strain in InGaAs/GaAs quantum wells with embedded InAs quantum dots

L. G. Vega-Macotela, G. Polupan, Ye Shcherbyna

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Photoluminescence (PL) spectra have been studied in the symmetric GaAs/In 0.15Ga 0.85As/GaAs quantum wells (QWs) with embedded InAs quantum dots (QDs), grown at different temperatures from the range 470-535 °C. The increase of QD growth temperature is accompanied by decreasing the QD surface density and the enlargement of QD lateral diameters. Simultaneously the variation of the PL intensity and PL peak positions none monotonously have been detected. To understand the reason of the variation of PL intensity and peak positions the PL temperature dependences and the X-ray diffraction (XRD) at low angles (1.75-1.92°) have been studied. The fitting procedure is applied to analysis the temperature shift of PL peak positions. Fitting has been done on the base of empirical expression for the band gap shrinkage that uses the Einstein temperature parameter. The character non monotonous for the Ga/In inter diffusion versus QD growth temperatures has been revealed. The XRD study has detected the high intensity peaks that corresponds to the diffraction of X-ray beam from the (311) crystal planes in GaAs QWs. The position of XRD peaks in the structures with QD grown at 490-510 °C is very close to the angles related to the diffraction from (311) planes in the bulk GaAs. In QD structures with QD grown at 470 and 525-535 °C the (311) XRD peaks shift to the higher diffraction angles that testifies on the essential compressive strains in these structures. The reason of the variation non monotonously of elastic strain versus QD densities has been discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1543-1545
Number of pages3
JournalPhysica Status Solidi (C) Current Topics in Solid State Physics
Volume9
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2012

Keywords

  • Compressive strain
  • Emission nonhomogeneity
  • Photoluminescence
  • Quantum dot structures

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