Electron-nuclear interactions in lightly-doped GaAs, studied through optically-detected magnetic resonance (ODMR)

ORAL

Abstract

Electron-nuclear interactions have been studied in lightly-doped GaAs via optically-detected magnetic resonance (ODMR). Thermally-polarized electrons were resonated with $\sim $10 GHz microwaves; the spin states were detected with cw optical Kerr rotation. The electron-nuclear interaction was manifested through an effective magnetic field produced by the hyperfine interaction between nuclei and donor electrons, which caused a shift in the electron ODMR peak position. The effective nuclear field could be eliminated by simultaneous magnetic resonance of the three nuclear species. A measurement of the nuclear spin relaxation time was obtained (5.6 minutes) by tracking the amount of effective nuclear field, in the absence of nuclear magnetic resonance. Finally, optically-detected electron-nuclear double resonance (ODENDOR) was also performed, by monitoring changes in the electron Kerr rotation signal while sweeping through nuclear resonant frequencies one at a time.

*Work supported by NSF, ACS/PRF, and Research Corporation

Authors

  • John Colton

    • Brigham Young University
  • Lee Wienkes

    • University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
  • Andrew Gierke

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Susan Allemann

    • University of Wisconsin-La Crosse
  • A.S. Bracker

    • Naval Research Laboratory
    • Naval Research Lab