Culling a Self-Assembled Quantum Dot as a Single-Photon Source Using X-ray Microscopy.
Arka Bikash Bikash DeyMilan K SanyalAndreas SchroppSilvio AchillesThomas Florian KellerIan FarrerDavid A RitchieFlorian BertramChristian G SchroerOliver H SeeckPublished in: ACS nano (2023)
Epitaxially grown self-assembled semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) with atom-like optical properties have emerged as the best choice for single-photon sources required for the development of quantum technology and quantum networks. Nondestructive selection of a single QD having desired structural, compositional, and optical characteristics is essential to obtain noise-free, fully indistinguishable single or entangled photons from single-photon emitters. Here, we show that the structural orientations and local compositional inhomogeneities within a single QD and the surrounding wet layer can be probed in a screening fashion by scanning X-ray diffraction microscopy and X-ray fluorescence with a few tens of nanometers-sized synchrotron radiation beam. The presented measurement protocol can be used to cull the best single QD from the enormous number of self-assembled dots grown simultaneously. The obtained results show that the elemental composition and resultant strain profiles of a QD are sensitive to in-plane crystallographic directions. We also observe that lattice expansion after a certain composition-limit introduces shear strain within a QD, enabling the possibility of controlled chiral-QD formation. Nanoscale chirality and compositional anisotropy, contradictory to common assumptions, need to be incorporated into existing theoretical models to predict the optical properties of single-photon sources and to further tune the epitaxial growth process of self-assembled quantum structures.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- electron microscopy
- molecular dynamics
- energy transfer
- single molecule
- quantum dots
- high speed
- mass spectrometry
- randomized controlled trial
- dual energy
- monte carlo
- atomic force microscopy
- optical coherence tomography
- tandem mass spectrometry
- decision making
- radiation induced
- room temperature
- molecularly imprinted