Towards isolating a single impurity-bound hole

ORAL

Abstract

Single acceptor-bound holes embedded in III-V semiconductor quantum wells could provide an ideal qubit system for scalable quantum information processing and quantum computation. This system combines strong homogenous optical transitions and millisecond long spin coherence times in a fabrication ready material (GaAs). However, single acceptor-bound excitons (A$^{0}$X) have yet to be optically isolated even in the purest bulk GaAs samples. This is primarily due to the high acceptor density (10$^{14}$ cm$^{-3}$) and exceptional optical homogeneity. We propose using stimulated emission depletion microscopy (STED) to increase our optical resolution far beyond the diffraction limit in order to spatially isolate a single acceptor-bound exciton. We report the first demonstration of stimulated emission of acceptor-bound excitons at 4.2K. We resonantly excite the A$^{0}$1s-A$^{0}$X transition and apply a second laser with high power (P$=$10mW) resonant with the 2s two-hole transition (THT). We observe a 30 percent reduction in the 1s PL intensity when the STED laser is resonant with the THT's. We will present our two-laser spectroscopy work that explores this coherent system and discuss our progress towards isolating a single acceptor-bound exciton using STED microscopy.

Authors

  • Russell Barbour

    University of Washington

  • Todd Karin

    University of Washington

  • Kai-Mei Fu

    University of Washington

  • Yoshiro Hirayama

    Tohoku University

  • Arne Ludwig

    Ruhr-Universit\"at Bochum

  • Andreas Wieck

    Ruhr-Universit\"at Bochum