Electromagnetically Induced Transparency in a GaAs Coupled Quantum Dot-Ring
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Herrero Hahn, Rebeca Victoria; Giraldo-Neira, A. S.; Vinasco, J. A.; Gil-Corrales, J. A.; Morales, A. L.; Duque, C. A.Editorial
MDPI
Materia
coupled quantum dot-ring electronic states electric field effects
Fecha
2025-09-22Referencia bibliográfica
Hahn, R.V.H.; Giraldo-Neira, A.S.; Vinasco, J.A.; Gil-Corrales, J.A.; Morales, A.L.; Duque, C.A. Electromagnetically Induced Transparency in a GaAs Coupled Quantum Dot-Ring. Nanomaterials 2025, 15, 1455. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano15181455
Patrocinador
Spanish Junta de Andalucía (PREDOC-01408); RA MESCS Higher Education and Science Committee (Research project N° 23RL-1C005)Resumen
In this work, the ground and low-lying excited states in a GaAs coupled quantum dot-ring
embedded in an AlGaAs cylindrical matrix are computed under the assumption of a finite
confinement potential and an axisymmetric model by means of the finite element method
and the effective mass approximation. The electron energy levels are studied as functions
of the intensity of externally applied electric and magnetic fields. Electromagnetically
induced transparency in the ladder configuration and linear optical absorption coefficient
are calculated thereupon. Our results suggest that magnetic fields are more suitable
than electric fields for controlling the optical properties of this nanostructure. Also, we
found that the system’s response, however, exhibits a striking asymmetry: while the
electromagnetically induced transparency is unexpectedly quenched under positive electric
fields due to vanishing dipole transition matrix elements, this limitation is completely
overcome by a magnetic field. Its application not only restores optical transparency across
the full range of electric field values but also drives substantially larger energy level shifts
and clear Aharonov–Bohm oscillations, making it a far more robust tool for controlling the
optical properties of confined electrons in dot-ring coupled heterostructures.





