TY - GEN
T1 - Theory of semiconductor laser cooling at low temperatures
AU - Rupper, G.
AU - Kwong, N. H.
AU - Binder, R.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - On the road toward experimental realization of laser-induced cooling of semiconductors, theoretical investigations are necessary for a detailed understanding of the microscopic phenomena underlying the cooling process, and for a prediction of optimal parameter regimes where efficient cooling could be expected. A recent realistic theory for cooling of bulk GaAs by Sheik-Bahae and Epstein has focused on the high-temperature regime, where the cooling process involves absorption of and luminescence from an electron-hole plasma. Using a microscopic many-particle theory, we extend the Sheik-Bahae Epstein approach to the low-temperature regime, where excitonic effects, i.e. effects of bound electron hole pairs in quasi-thermal equilibrium with correlated unbound pairs (i.e. the plasma) become important. We use a diagrammatic approach that is non-perturbative in the Coulomb interaction and contains effects of phase-space filling, single-particle renormalization in a partially ionized plasma, and screening. We ensure that our theory contains the relevant limiting cases for (partial) ionization in the low-density regime (Saha equation and Beth-Uhlenbeck formula) as well as the high density regime (Mott transition). Based on our microscopic theory for absorption and luminescence in the quasi-thermal equilibrium regime, we present a detailed study of cooling criteria at low temperature, focusing mainly on the temperature regime between 5K and 100K. In particular, we discuss the transition from the high temperature regime dominated by absorption in the e-h continuum to the low-temperature regime dominated by resonant exciton absorption.
AB - On the road toward experimental realization of laser-induced cooling of semiconductors, theoretical investigations are necessary for a detailed understanding of the microscopic phenomena underlying the cooling process, and for a prediction of optimal parameter regimes where efficient cooling could be expected. A recent realistic theory for cooling of bulk GaAs by Sheik-Bahae and Epstein has focused on the high-temperature regime, where the cooling process involves absorption of and luminescence from an electron-hole plasma. Using a microscopic many-particle theory, we extend the Sheik-Bahae Epstein approach to the low-temperature regime, where excitonic effects, i.e. effects of bound electron hole pairs in quasi-thermal equilibrium with correlated unbound pairs (i.e. the plasma) become important. We use a diagrammatic approach that is non-perturbative in the Coulomb interaction and contains effects of phase-space filling, single-particle renormalization in a partially ionized plasma, and screening. We ensure that our theory contains the relevant limiting cases for (partial) ionization in the low-density regime (Saha equation and Beth-Uhlenbeck formula) as well as the high density regime (Mott transition). Based on our microscopic theory for absorption and luminescence in the quasi-thermal equilibrium regime, we present a detailed study of cooling criteria at low temperature, focusing mainly on the temperature regime between 5K and 100K. In particular, we discuss the transition from the high temperature regime dominated by absorption in the e-h continuum to the low-temperature regime dominated by resonant exciton absorption.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33646579182&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=33646579182&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1117/12.646788
DO - 10.1117/12.646788
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:33646579182
SN - 0819461571
SN - 9780819461575
T3 - Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
BT - Physics and Simulation of Optoelectronic Devices XIV
T2 - Physics and Simulation of Optoelectronic Devices XIV
Y2 - 22 January 2006 through 26 January 2006
ER -