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Axially-stacked quantum dots (QDs) in nanowires (NWs) have important applications in fabricating nanoscale quantum devices and lasers. Although their performances are very sensitive to crystal quality and structures, there is relatively little study on defect-free growth with Au-free mode and structure optimisation for achiving high performances. Here, we report a detailed study of the first self-catalyzed defect-free axially-stacked deep NWQDs. High structural quality is maintained when 50 GaAs QDs are placed in a single GaAsP NW. The QDs have very sharp interfaces (1.8~3.6 nm) and can be closely stacked with very similar structural properties. They exhibit the deepest carrier confinement (~90 meV) and largest exciton-biexciton splitting (~11 meV) among non-nitride III-V NWQDs, and can maintain good optical properties after being stored in ambient atmosphere for over 6 months due to excellent stability. Our study sets a solid foundation to build high-performance axially-stacked NWQD devices that are compatible with CMOS technologies.
Compared to traditional pn-junction photovoltaics, hot carrier solar cells offer potentially higher efficiency by extracting work from the kinetic energy of photogenerated hot carriers before they cool to the lattice temperature. Hot carrier solar ce
We present an improved fabrication process for overlapping aluminum gate quantum dot devices on Si/SiGe heterostructures that incorporates low-temperature inter-gate oxidation, thermal annealing of gate oxide, on-chip electrostatic discharge (ESD) pr
Scalability and foundry compatibility (as for example in conventional silicon based integrated computer processors) in developing quantum technologies are exceptional challenges facing current research. Here we introduce a quantum photonic technology
Hybrid systems consisting of a quantum emitter coupled to a mechanical oscillator are receiving increasing attention for fundamental science and potential applications in quantum technologies. In contrast to most of the presented works, in which the
Graphene-based photodetectors have shown responsivities up to 10$^8$A/W and photoconductive gains up to 10$^{8}$ electrons per photon. These photodetectors rely on a highly absorbing layer in close proximity of graphene, which induces a shift of the