Coherent electron transport is studied in an electrically driven quantum cascade structure. Ultrafast quantum transport from the injector into the upper laser state is investigated by midinfrared pump-probe experiments directly monitoring the femtosecond saturation and subsequent recovery of electrically induced optical gain. We demonstrate for the first time pronounced gain oscillations giving evidence for a coherent electron motion. The coexistence of a long dephasing time of quantum coherence and high Coulomb scattering rates in the injector points to the occurrence of scattering-induced coherence in electron transport.
Time-resolved Faraday rotation measurements in the ultraviolet have been performed to reveal the ultrafast spin dynamics of electrons in colloidal ZnO quantum dots. Oscillating Faraday rotation signals are detected at frequencies corresponding to an effective g factor of g = 1.96. Biexponential oscillation decay is observed that is due to (i) rapid depopulation of the fundamental exciton (tau = 250 ps) and (ii) slow electron spin dephasing ( T 2 = 1.2 ns) within a metastable state formed by hole-trapping at the quantum dot surface.
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