1. Introduction
Group III - Nitrides based on GaN have recently been shown to have an enormous potential for optoelectronic applications in the visible up to ultraviolet spectral range. Light emitting diodes (LEDs) Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Iwasa and Nagahama[1] and laser diodes (LDs) Reference Nakamura, Senoh, Nagahama, Iwasa, Yamada, Matsushita, Sugimoto and Kiyoku[2] Reference Akasaki, Sota, Sakai, Tanaka, Koike and Amano[3] have been developed. Excitonic contributions have been shown to play an important role in the emission processes of these devices Reference Narukawa, Kawakami, Funato, Fujita, Fujita and Nakamura[4]. The study of excitonic resonances with linear optical experiments is often difficult. In particular, photoluminescence spectra are often dominated by bound excitons and free exciton resonances are difficult to determine. In contrast, transient degenerate four wave mixing (FWM) experiments are a well suited, nonlinear optical method to determine as well the excitonic resonance as its dephasing time and thereby the homogeneous broadening of the resonance Reference Hellmann, Koch, Feldmann, Cundiff, Göbel, Yakovlev, Waag and Landwehr[5]. Additionally, small energy splittings Reference Koch, von Plessen, Feldmann and Göbel[6] can be determined with high precision even in the case of large inhomogeneous broadening. In this article, we present transient FWM studies on wurtzite GaN and determine the dephasing time of the A-exciton as well as the energy splitting of the A- and B-exciton.
2. Experimental details
We use a frequency doubled Kerr-lens modelocked Ti:sapphire laser with pulses of ≈ 180 fs full width at half maximum. The laser beam is divided into two parts which are temporally delayed with respect to each other using a variable delay stage. The FWM experiment is performed in the two-pulse self diffraction configuration in reflection geometry Reference Hellmann, Koch, Feldmann, Cundiff, Göbel, Yakovlev, Waag and Landwehr[5] shown schematically in Figure 1. The two beams are focussed onto the sample with a lens. The coherent interaction of the two pulses with the wavevectors
and generates there a third order nonlinear polarization giving rise to the FWM signal, which is coherently emitted into the phase - matched direction . We detect the signal in reflection since the transmitted beam is scattered by the rough surface of the substrate. The FWM signal is measured spectrally and temporally integrated as a function of the time delay τ between the two exciting pulses using a photomultiplier.
The sample is a MOCVD grown, about 3 μm thick layer of GaN deposited on a (0001) sapphire substrate with the c-axis perpendicular to the surface plane Reference Volm, Oettinger, Streibl, Kovalev, Ben-Chorin, Diener, Meyer, Majewski, Eckey, Hoffman, Amano, Akasaki, Hiramatsu and Detchprohm[7]. It is kept in a Helium flow cryostat at a temperature of ≈ 10 K.
3. Homogeneous linewidth of the A-exciton
First, we tune the energy of the exciting laser to the A-exciton resonance (3.494 eV) and measure the FWM signal as a function of time delay in order to investigate the dephasing time of the A-exciton. A typical FWM transient is shown in Figure 2. The decay of the FWM signal towards positive time delay yields the dephasing time T2 of the exciton. We obtain a T2 of 0.58 ps according to: T2 = 2 ·τdecay, where τdecay is the single exponential decay time. The homogeneous broadening Γ) of the A-exciton for these excitation conditions is then 2.3 meV, according to Γ = 2ħ/T 2 (we assume here the limit of homogeneous broadening since the sample does not exhibit a Stokes shift and the linewidths obtained from linear optical measurements are comparable to the homogeneous broadening that we obtain).
We perform measurements of the homogeneous broadening as a function of both, temperature and exciton density, respectively, in order to separate the effects of exciton - phonon and exciton - exciton scattering. The homogeneous broadening Γhom exhibits a linear dependence on temperature T and on exciton density nx Reference Hellmann, Koch, Feldmann, Cundiff, Göbel, Yakovlev, Waag and Landwehr[5] Reference Mayer, Pelekanos, Kuhl, Magnea and Mariette[8]: Γhom(T,nx) = Γ00 + γphT + γxxab 3Ebnx, at low temperatures when acoustic phonon scattering is the dominant scattering mechanism varying with temperature and at low densities when exciton-exciton scattering varies with density. The intrinsic homogeneous broadening Γ00 accounts for scattering of excitons with crystal defects, γph and γxx are a measure for scattering of excitons with acoustic phonons and scattering with other excitons, respectively. Finally, aB = 3.6 nm is the Bohr radius of the exciton and EB = 20 meV Reference Pau, Kuhl, Scholz and Haerle[9] is its binding energy. The temperature dependence (a, for two different excitation densities) and the density dependence (b), for two different temperatures) of Γhom are shown in Figure 3a. From a linear fit to all our data, we find Γ00 = 1.73 meV, γph = 8.2 μeV/K, and γxx = 2.2. Stanley Pau and coworkers found on a different sample a value for Γ00 which is about 4 times smaller than our value. Reference Pau, Kuhl, Scholz and Haerle[9] They also find an about three times stronger density dependence and no temperature dependence of the homogeneous broadening. However, it should be noted that propagation effects (exciton-polaritons) might play an important role for the measured decay times of the FWM signal Reference Schulze, Knorr and Koch[10]. We expect, however, that for our experiments which are performed in reflection geometry these effects are less important than in transmission Reference Kutzer, Lummer, Heitz, Hoffmann, Broser, Kurtz and Hommel[11]. The influence of propagation effects will be subject of future studies.
Second, we study the influence of the photon energy of the exciting laser on the FWM transients. A set of FWM transients for different excitation energies between 3.491 eV and 3.515 eV is shown in Figure 4. For excitation energies between the A- and B-exciton resonance, the transients exhibit strong modulations with a period of 0.52 ps. These modulations originate from the coherent excitation of both the A- and B-excitons with the spectrally broad laser pulse. The modulations are caused either by polarization interference or by real quantum beats between the A-exciton and the B-exciton. In both cases, the beat period τAB of the modulations directly provides the energy splitting ΔAB of A-exciton and B-exciton: ΔEAB = h/τAB, and we obtain accordingly a value of ΔEAB = 7.98 meV in our sample. This value is in the same range as well as the energy splitting of A- and B- excitons obtained on similar Reference Volm, Oettinger, Streibl, Kovalev, Ben-Chorin, Diener, Meyer, Majewski, Eckey, Hoffman, Amano, Akasaki, Hiramatsu and Detchprohm[7] and also on different samples Reference Shan, Little, Fischer, Song, Goldenberg, Perry, Bremser and Davis[12].
4. Conclusions
In conclusion, we present first transient four wave mixing studies on GaN with wurtzite structure. We find an intrinsic homogeneous broadening of 1.67 meV for the A-exciton. A pronounced beating is observed in the four wave mixing transients when the energy of the exciting laser is tuned between the A-exciton and the B-exciton. The beat period yields an energy splitting of 7.98 meV of the A- and the B-exciton.