Abstract.A theory of self-induced transparency for a TM-mode propagating in a planar semiconductor waveguide sandwiched between two dielectric media is developed. A transition layer between the waveguide and one of the connected media is described using a model of a two-dimensional sheet of quantum dots. Explicit analytical expressions for the optical soliton in the presence of single-excitonic and biexcitonic transitions are obtained with realistic parameters which can be reached in current experiments. Semiconductor quantum dots (SQDs) as model systems for the study of light-matter interaction have been investigated extensively in the past years. Due to their zerodimensional properties such as discrete energy spectra resulting from the confinement of the charge carriers in all three spatial dimensions, these atomlike structures have been proposed for the use as qubits in quantum information processing [1] as well as for laser devices [2]. In addition, due to their large dipole moments reaching values on the order of 10 −17 esu cm [3], the interaction between SQDs and optical light fields is strongly enhanced in comparison with atomic systems, making them good candidates to study nonlinear optical propagation effects. Nonlinear optical experiments can be performed with pulses of a few hundreds of femtoseconds which are long compared to the inhomogeneous broadening but short enough so that the electron-phonon interaction which acts on a picosecond timescale can be neglected [4][5][6][7], offering time scales necessary for coherent interaction. Finally, great progress has been made in the design and control of SQDs for technical devices.
PACSCompared to atomic systems, typically described by noninteracting two-level systems, SQDs experience manybody effects (such as exciton-exciton interactions leading to the formation of biexcitonic states) which are unknown in atomic systems. In addition, the observation of optical coherence effects in ensembles of SQDs is influenced by the inhomogeneous line broadening due to dot size fluc- tuations, leading to an inhomogeneous single-exciton and biexciton level broadening, with a full width at half maximum of typically more than several tens of meV [8]. Thus, nonlinear optical effects such as SIT differ substantially in SQDs.In atomic systems, resonant solitons can be formed within the nonlinear McCall-Hahn mechanism [9] if the conditions for self-induced transparency (SIT) are fulfilled: ωT 1, T T 1,2 , where T and ω are the width and frequency of the pulse and T 1 and T 2 are the longitudinal and transverse relaxation times of the atoms, respectively. When the area of the pulse Θ > π, a soliton (2π pulse) is generated. It was shown in reference [10] that solitons can form in waveguides covered with thin films of homogeneously broadened two-level atoms at exact resonance.In semiconductors, experimental observations of selfinduced transmission on a free exciton resonance in CdSe [11] and in InGaAs quantum dot waveguides [8] have been reported. Theoretically, the effect of SIT...