“…Among the group III–V semiconductors, bulk indium arsenide (InAs) is a direct semiconductor with a narrow bulk band gap of ∼0.35 eV . Colloidal InAs NCs exhibit widely tunable emitting wavelengths ranging from the visible region to the short-wavelength infrared (SWIR, 1000–2000 nm) region by size adjustment and stand out as an infrared-active candidate material for efficient SWIR LEDs, biological imaging, photovoltaics, and sensing applications. ,, InAs in bulk is known to crystallize into two distinct phases, a stable cubic zinc-blende phase and a metastable high-temperature hexagonal wurtzite phase. , Compared to the zinc-blende structure with T d point group symmetry, the characteristic feature of the wurtzite structure ( C 6 v point group symmetry) is the crystal field, causing the formation of three doubly-degenerate hole bands at the topmost valence band when combining with the spin–orbit interaction . These three hole bands are the so-called A (heavy hole), B (light hole), and C (split-off hole) bands, with Γ 9 v , Γ 7 v , and Γ 7 v symmetries, respectively .…”