RESUMO
We perform high-intensity pulse propagation experiments in semiconductors. On a free exciton resonance, we demonstrate coherent Self-Induced Transmission. Tuning the laser towards higher energy, thus exciting continuum states, the degree of transmission is reduced. The pulse breakup vanishes. Increasing the pulse intensity by several orders of magnitude, pulse breakup can be observed again.
RESUMO
ZnO is presently experiencing a research boom with more than 2000 ZnO-related publications in 2005. This phenomenon is triggered, for example, by hope to use ZnO as a material for blue/UV optoelectronics as an alternative to GaN, as a cheap, transparent, conducting oxide, as a material for electronic circuits that are transparent in the visible or for semiconductor spintronics. Currently, however, the main problem is to achieve high, reproducible and stable p-doping. Herein, we critically review aspects of the material growth, fundamental properties of ZnO and ZnO-based nanostructures and doping as well as present and future applications with emphasis on the electronic and optical properties including stimulated emission.
RESUMO
Autocorrelation spectroscopy on the basis of thousands of individual near-field photoluminescence spectra of single ultrathin CdSe layers at low temperatures exhibits a strong positive correlation peak around 18 meV energy with a width of 5 meV. Using simulations and experiments as a function of temperature and laser intensity, we can exclude interpretations along the lines of biexcitons or phonon sidebands. We attribute this feature to the splitting of ground state and an excited state in individual quantum islands. This interpretation implies that the potential minima are rather uniform in size and that the distribution of excitons is nonthermal.