Nanocrystalline
InP quantum dots (QDs) hold promise for heavy-metal-free optoelectronic
applications due to their bright and size-tunable emission in the
visible range. Photochemical stability and high photoluminescence
(PL) quantum yield are obtained by a diversity of epitaxial shells
around the InP core. To understand and optimize the emission line
shapes, the exciton fine structure of InP core/shell QD systems needs
be investigated. Here, we study the exciton fine structure of InP/ZnSe
core/shell QDs with core diameters ranging from 2.9 to 3.6 nm (PL
peak from 2.3 to 1.95 eV at 4 K). PL decay measurements as a function
of temperature in the 10 mK to 300 K range show that the lowest exciton
fine structure state is a dark state, from which radiative recombination
is assisted by coupling to confined acoustic phonons with energies
ranging from 4 to 7 meV, depending on the core diameter. Circularly
polarized fluorescence line-narrowing (FLN) spectroscopy at 4 K under
high magnetic fields (up to 30 T) demonstrates that radiative recombination
from the dark F = ±2 state involves acoustic
and optical phonons, from both the InP core and the ZnSe shell. Our
data indicate that the highest intensity FLN peak is an acoustic phonon
replica rather than a zero-phonon line, implying that the energy separation
observed between the F = ±1 state and the highest
intensity peak in the FLN spectra (6 to 16 meV, depending on the InP
core size) is larger than the splitting between the dark and bright
fine structure exciton states.
Layered α-RuCl3 has been discussed as a proximate Kitaev spin liquid compound. Raman and THz spectroscopy of magnetic excitations confirm that the low-temperature antiferromagnetic ordered phase features a broad Raman continuum, together with two magnon-like excitations at 2.7 and 3.6 meV, respectively. The continuum strength is maximized as long-range order is suppressed by an external magnetic field. The state above the field-induced quantum phase transition around 7.5 T is characterized by a gapped multi-particle continuum out of which a two-particle bound state emerges, together with a well-defined single-particle excitation at lower energy. Exact diagonalization calculations demonstrate that Kitaev and off-diagonal exchange terms in the Fleury-Loudon operator are crucial for the occurrence of these features in the Raman spectra. Our study firmly establishes the partially-polarized quantum disordered character of the high-field phase. arXiv:1908.11617v1 [cond-mat.str-el]
We perform polarized electronic Raman scattering on URu2Si2 single crystals at low temperature down to 8 K in the hidden-order state and under a magnetic field up to 10 T. The hidden-order state is characterized by a sharp excitation at 1.7 meV and a gap in the electronic continuum below 6.8 meV. Both Raman signatures are of pure A2g symmetry. By comparing the behavior of the Raman sharp excitation and the neutron resonance at Q0=(0,0,1), we provide new evidence, constrained by selection rules of the two probes, that the hidden-order state breaks the translational symmetry along the c axis such that Γ and Z points fold on top of each other. The observation of these distinct Raman features with a peculiar A2g symmetry as a signature of the hidden-order phase places strong constraints on current theories of the hidden-order in URu2Si2.
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