Optical Gain and Stimulated Emission in Nanocrystal Quantum Dots

Victor I. Klimov(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Alexander Mikhailovsky(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Su Xu(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Anton V. Malko(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Jennifer A. Hollingsworth(Los Alamos National Laboratory), C. A. Leatherdale(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), H.‐J. Eisler(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Moungi G. Bawendi(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Science
October 13, 2000
Cited by 2,800

Abstract

The development of optical gain in chemically synthesized semiconductor nanoparticles (nanocrystal quantum dots) has been intensely studied as the first step toward nanocrystal quantum dot lasers. We examined the competing dynamical processes involved in optical amplification and lasing in nanocrystal quantum dots and found that, despite a highly efficient intrinsic nonradiative Auger recombination, large optical gain can be developed at the wavelength of the emitting transition for close-packed solids of these dots. Narrowband stimulated emission with a pronounced gain threshold at wavelengths tunable with the size of the nanocrystal was observed, as expected from quantum confinement effects. These results unambiguously demonstrate the feasibility of nanocrystal quantum dot lasers.


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