Two-dimensional double-quantum spectroscopy: peak shapes as a sensitive probe of carrier interactions in quantum wells
Abstract
We identify carrier scattering at densities below which it has previously been observed in semiconductor quantum wells. These effects are evident in the peakshapes of 2D double-quantum spectra, which change as a function of excitation density. At high excitation densities (≥ 109 carriers/,cm-2) we observe untilted peaks similar to those reported in previous experiments. At low excitation densities (<108 carriers cm-2) we observe narrower, tilted peaks. Using a simple simulation, we show that tilted peak-shapes are expected in double-quantum spectra when inhomogeneous broadening is much larger than homogeneous broadening, and that fast pure-decoherence of the double-quantum coherence can obscure this peak tilt. These results show that carrier interactions are important at lower densities than previously expected, and that the `natural' double-quantum peakshapes are hidden by carrier interactions at the excitation densities typically used. Furthermore, these results demonstrate that analysis of 2D peak-shapes in double-quantum spectroscopy provides an incisive tool for identifying interactions at low excitation density.
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