Spectral signatures of high-symmetry quantum dots and effects of symmetry breaking
K. Fredrik Karlsson, Daniel Y. Oberli, Marc-Andr\'e Dupertuis,, Valentina Troncale, Marcin Byszewski, Emanuele Pelucchi, Alok Rudra, Per Olof, Holtz, E. Kapon

TL;DR
This paper employs photoluminescence spectroscopy to identify and analyze spectral features of high-symmetry InGaAs/AlGaAs quantum dots, revealing how symmetry influences their fine structure and exchange interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a minimal-input spectral identification method for quantum dots, enabling detailed analysis of fine structures and symmetry effects, including symmetry breaking detection.
Findings
Identification of over thirty emission lines in quantum dots.
Spectral features are highly sensitive to the quantum dot symmetry.
Hole-hole exchange interactions help detect symmetry breaking.
Abstract
A sequence of photoluminescence spectroscopy based methods are used to rigorously identify and study all the main spectral features (more than thirty emission lines) of site controlled InGaAs/AlGaAs quantum dots (QDs) grown along [111]B in inverted tetrahedral pyramids. The studied QDs reveal signatures of one confined electron level, one heavy-hole-like level and one light-hole-like level. The various heavy-light-hole hybrid exciton complexes formed in these QDs are studied by polarization resolved spectroscopy, excitation power dependence, crystal temperature dependence and temporal single photon correlation measurements. The presented approach, which only requires a minimal theoretical input, enables strict spectral identification of the fine structure patterns including weak and spectrally overlapping emission lines. Furthermore, it allows the involved electron-hole and hole-hole…
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