The squares and circles symbols indicate the CPGE current of the excitonic state 1H1E induced by SIA and BIA, respectively.
The solid lines are the fitting results. which NVP-LDE225 nmr describes the dependence of the CPGE current on the angle of incidence θ obtained theoretically [2, 34]. Here, , E 0 is the electric field amplitude of the incident light, κ is the absorption coefficient, γ = α or β, P circ is the degree of circular polarization, i.e., , and n is the refractive index of the QWs material. It can be seen from Figure 3 that the experimental data agree well with the phenomenological theory of CPGE. In the fittings, n is adopted to be 3.55 according to [35], and the parameter Poziotinib cell line A is fitted to be 1,232 ± 15 and 140 ± 10 for SIA- and BIA-induced CPGE current, respectively. Thus, we can obtain α/β = 1,232 ± 15 / (140 ± 10) = 8.8 ± 0.1, much larger than the value obtained in symmetric InGaAs/AlGaAs QWs (4.95) investigated in our previous work [26]. This indicates that SIA is the dominant mechanism to induce spin splitting in the step InGaAs/GaAs/AlGaAs QWs. The normalized CPGE signal induced by BIA
is estimated to be 0.26 ± 0.01 at an incident angle of 40 °, which is larger than that obtained in the symmetric InGaAs/AlGaAs QWs (0.22 ± 0.01) reported in our previous work [26]. This can be attributed to the size quantization effect of the electron NU7441 clinical trial wave vector k along the growth direction z, since the effective well width is reduced in the step QWs compared to the symmetric QWs, and the Dresselhaus-type spin splitting increases with decreasing well width of QWs according to [9]. Although the Dresselhaus SOC is enhanced in step QWs, the Rashba SOC increases more rapidly, which results in larger RD ratio
in the step QWs. In order to find out the reason for the strong Rashba-type spin splitting, we further perform PR and RDS measurements. Using the method that has been used in [26], we can estimate the intensity of the internal field to be 12.3 ± 0.4 kV/cm, which is comparable to that in the symmetric QWs (12.6 kV/cm). The imaginary part of RD spectrum Δ r/r is shown in Figure 4, which also shows the spectrum of the common Branched chain aminotransferase photocurrent under dc bias (denoted as j 0), the reflectance spectrum Δ R/R, and the spectra of normalized CPGE current induced by SIA and BIA, respectively. By comparing them with each other and performing the theoretical calculation using six-band k·p theory, we can identify the energy position related to the transitions of the excitonic states 1H1E, 2H1E, and 1L1E, as indicated by the arrows in Figure 4. It can be seen that the peak located near 908 nm in the CPGE spectra is related to the transition of the excitonic state 1H1E in the QWs. From the photoconductivity signal j 0, the 2D density of the photo-induced carriers corresponding to the transition 1H1E is estimated to be about 5 ×1010cm-2.