Optics and Photonics Journal
Vol.07 No.08(2017), Article ID:78282,19 pages
10.4236/opj.2017.78B008
Controllable Tunneling of Light through a Quantum-Dot-Molecule Dielectric Film via Electromagnetically Induced Transparency
Ruixi Zeng, Jing Gu, Jianqi Shen*
Centre for Optical and Electromagnetic Research, State Key Laboratory for Modern Optical Instrumentation, Zijingang Campus, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China




Received: May 19, 2017; Accepted: August 7, 2017; Published: August 10, 2017
ABSTRACT
Since discrete multilevel transitions of quantum-dot molecules driven by external electromagnetic fields can exhibit quantum coherence effects, such an optical characteristic can be utilized to control propagation of electromagnetic wave through a quantum-dot molecule dielectric film. Since inner-dot tunneling in quantum-dot molecules can be controlled by a gate voltage, destructive quantum coherence among multilevel transitions in quantum-dot molecule would give rise to EIT (electromagnetically induced transparency). In this report, we shall investigate controllable on- and off-resonance tunneling effects of an incident electromagnetic wave through such a quantum-dot-molecule dielectric film, of which the optical response is tuned by the switchable gate voltage. We have found from the theoretical mechanism that a high gate voltage can cause the EIT phenomenon of quantum-dot-molecule systems, and under the condition of on-resonance light tunneling through the thin film, the probe field will propagation without loss if the probe frequency detuning is zero. By taking advantage of these effects sensitive to the tunable gate voltage, such quantum coherence would be integrated in certain photonic structures, and some devices such as photonic switching and transistors can be designed. Transient evolution of optical characteristics in the quantum-dot-molecule dielectric film (once the tunable gate voltage is turned on or off) is also considered in this report.
Keywords:
Resonant Tunneling, Quantum-Dot Molecules, Quantum Coherence, Controllable Transmission

1. Introduction
Light propagation control is one of the key technologies with the development of photonic and optical science. Over the past two decades, utilizing one light to control another light has attracted a lot of interest of a group of researchers [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]. In quantum optics, quantum coherence can be used to realize such applications. For example, quantum coherence in atomic physics has captured intensive attention because it exhibits some novel phenomena in various multi-level atomic systems [3]-[9]. All of these effects can be found in three or four level atomic systems, which control the weak probe field through constructive or destructive quantum coherence among transitions driven by one or two applied control lights. Quantum coherence effects are often observed in neutral alkali-metal atomic vapors [3]-[8]. However, there are also some discrete energy level structures in solid materials, which may also be used to realize quantum coherence. One of them is the material of semiconductor quantum dots [10] [11] [12]. As is well known, in a quantum dot, electrons and holes should only be in some specific states of quantum mechanical wave functions, and this would cause the effect of multilevel transitions. That is to say, lossless propagation of a probe field in such a quantum-dot quantum coherent medium can be achieved (electromagnetically induced transparency, EIT) if we tune the frequency of the probe field resonant with the quantum-dot energy level transition. In this case EIT effect results from the destructive quantum coherence among the quantum- dot three-level transitions. Besides, we should also take into account the quantum-dot molecules [13] [14] [15] [16]. A quantum-dot molecule is a system of two or more coupled quantum dots, where coherent electronic states form through inter-dot tunneling [17] [18]. There have been many interesting applications and effects realized in quantum-dot molecular media, e.g., optical bistability [19] [20], slow light [21] [22], resonance fluorescence [23], electron-hole excitons [24], quantum interference and unusual optical responses [25], as well as tripartite hybrid quantum entanglement [26].
In this work, we will discuss the propagation effect controlled by a tunable gate voltage through a quantum-dot molecule dielectric film. Our study is performed based on the work of Zohravi and M. Mahmoudi [18]. We shall focus on the controllable tunneling effect via quantum coherence, including the multi- level transitions of quantum-dot molecules. The transitions of quantum-dot molecules are both driven by a gate voltage (playing a role of controlling light in the conventional EIT) and by an incident electromagnetic wave (playing a role of probe light in the conventional EIT), and then the transmission characteristics of the incident electromagnetic wave can be controlled by the gate voltage. We expect that this tunable and sensitive optical response driven by quantum coherence in multi-level quantum-dot molecule systems may open prospects in new domains for designing devices, e.g., microcircuits in integrated photonics/optics.
The central working mechanism of this work has been published in the literature [27]. However, this paper [27] may be quite overelaborate for understanding because there are various tedious physical details. In the present conference report, we shall review briefly the physical mechanism and the main results of this work on “quantum-coherence assisted tunable on-and off-resonance tunneling through a quantum-dot-molecule dielectric film”.
2. Theoretical Mechanism of Controllable Tunneling of Light through a Quantum-Dot-Molecule Dielectric Film
Novel optical and electromagnetic responses relevant to quantum coherence can be exhibited through level transitions caused by phase coherence in quantum- dot systems, including quantum-dot molecular systems. A three-level system model can be used to describe the interaction between an incident probe light and a quantum-dot molecule, in which the light-molecule coupling is manipulated through a tunable gate voltage, e.g., an
-configuration three-level system (see Figure 1(a)) consists of two lower level
,
and one upper level
. As is well known, in a traditional atomic EIT, a control light couples the pair of
-
and a weak probe light drives the transition of
-
. Now in the present quantum-dot molecule (see Figure 1(a)), a low-frequency gate voltage plays the role of the control light, which excites the
-
transition (causing inner-dot electron tunneling between two quantum dots in a quantum-dot molecular system [18]).
We define the frequency detuning of control light and probe light as
and
, respectively, where
and
represent the level transition frequencies, and
,
denote the angular frequencies of
Figure 1. Schematic diagrams of three-level configuration in a quantum-dot molecule (a) and the propagation of light in quantum-dot molecule film (b). The three-level
-con- figuration quantum-dot molecule system consists of two quantum dots (a), i.e., 









the control and probe fields, respectively. Since the incident probe light (







The Rabi frequency of the weak probe light and the gate voltage are defined as 






for 













Now we can obtain the steady solution of the equation, noting that in the equation of 




In order to comply with the “notations and conventions” of Zohravi and M. Mahmoudi [18], we will choose the probe frequency detuning 


electric field strength of the incident electromagnetic wave), the electric susceptibility 


If the gate voltage 





rate 
Next we shall discuss the reflection and transmission of the incident probe light in the thin film system. Figure 1(b) and Figure 2 shows that a uniform electromagnetic plane wave (probe field) which travels along z-direction in medium 1 (


Figure 2. Schematic diagram of the propagation of a probe light through a quantum-dot molecule film. The probe field is incident on the film, and is reflected back and transmitted through the film. The thick arrow represents the control field or the voltage gate.

and the transmission coefficient of the film is

In Equations (5) and (6), 


Now the theoretical model for “quantum-coherence assisted tunable on- and off-resonance tunneling through a quantum-dot-molecule dielectric film” has been established, and in the following sections, we shall give some numerical examples of controllable tunneling of light through the quantum-dot-molecule dielectric film.
3. Numerical Example of Quantum Coherence for Manipulating Electromagnetic Wave Transmission
The tunable light tunneling through a quantum-coherent dielectric film doped with quantum-dot molecules will be considered in what follows. The definitions of “on resonance” and “off resonance” are given as follows: when the thin film thickness 
















The dispersion of 



Figure 3. Both the real and imaginary parts of the susceptibility 






Figure 4. Both the real and imaginary parts of the susceptibility 



and off-resonance tunnelling are plotted in Figure 5 and Figure 6, where we have considered the effect of quantum coherence in the cases of small gate voltage 

Figure 5. The dispersion characteristics of the reflection coefficient














is zero or small. For the following figures, we have chosen the background permittivity of the dielectric film











In the above figures, the EIT effect is not dominant because the gate voltage 
Figure 6. The reflection and transmission spectrum of the thin film in the cases of both on- and off-resonance tunneling, i.e., the effect caused by two-level absorption (












The reflection and transmission spectra of the thin film in the case of on-re- sonance tunneling with the film thickness 




The reflection and the transmission spectra of the thin film in the case of off-resonance tunneling with the film thickness 


Figure 7. The reflection spectrum of the thin film in the case of on-resonance light tunneling with the film thickness




Figure 8. The transmission spectrum of the thin film in the case of on-resonance tunneling with the film thickness





Figure 9. The reflection spectrum of the thin film in the case of off-resonance tunneling with the film thickness

Figure 10. The transmission spectrum of the thin film in the case of off-resonance tunneling with the film thickness


Since there are some tunable parameters, e.g., the gate-voltage Rabi frequency and gate-voltage angular frequency, the optical response of quantum-dot molecular systems can be modified by external control fields (e.g., gate voltage), and the tunable reflection and transmission characteristics of the quantum-dot molecular film in the states of on- and off-resonance light tunneling can, therefore, be utilized to design some devices such as photonic switching and transistors.
It can be found in Figure 10 that when the probe frequency detuning (








4. The Tunable Dispersion Characteristics of the Reflection and Transmission Spectra in Quantum Coherence for Manipulating Electromagnetic Wave Transmission
The three-dimeniosional dispersion characteristics of the reflection and transmission spectra of the thin film, in which the film thickness (defined as 








The three-dimeniosional dispersion characteristics of the reflection and transmission spectrum of the thin film, in which the film thickness is defined as 






Figure 11. The tunable dispersion characteristics of the reflection and transmission spectrum of the thin film, of which the thickness is defined as




Figure 12. The tunable dispersion characteristics of the reflection and transmission spectrum of the thin film, of which the thickness is defined as 

Figure 13. The tunable dispersion characteristics of the reflection and transmission spectrum of the thin film, of which the thickness is defined as 


Figure 14. The tunable dispersion characteristics of the reflection and transmission spectrum of the thin film, of which the thickness is defined as 





Figure 15. The tunable dispersion characteristics of the reflection and transmission spectrum of the thin film, of which the thickness is defined as 








reflectance 

5. Transient Evolution of Controllable Tunneling of Light
In the preceding sections we have addressed the steady optical properties of the quantum-dot molecular dielectric film, where the gate voltage has been turned on and hence all the physical quantities of the three-level quantum-dot molecular system are time-independent (i.e., steady). However, when the magnitude of gate voltage changes from one value to another one, e.g., the gate voltage is turned off before time 


where the small terms such as 



The steady solution when time 



We assume the time-dependent solution is of the form


The determinant of the matrix is

This leads to the relation


The solution of 



Some coefficients 






6. Concluding Remarks
Quantum coherence, which occurs in alkali-metal atomic vapor and semiconductor quantum-dot media, has been studied in the literature [1]-[12]. In this report, we have considered the quantum-dot molecule dielectric film to realize the quantum coherence following the work [18] of controlling the propagation of light via external gate voltage in dielectric film doped with quantum-dot molecules. The gate voltage driving the inner-dot tunneling can make the quantum- dot molecule system exhibit quantum coherence―EIT. We study both on-and off-resonance tunneling behavior in the quantum-dot molecule dielectric film related to the EIT effect. Reflection and transmission spectra of an incident electromagnetic field (probe field) can be tuned by the gate voltage applied on the quantum-dot molecule system. Under the large gate voltage and on-resonance tunneling condition, the probe light will propagate without loss through the quantum-dot molecule dielectric film if the probe frequency detuning is zero. The effects associated with the interaction of light with quantum dots as well as quantum-dot coupling effect would find potential applications in photonic device design such as optical switching and photonic logic gates.
Acknowledgements
This work is supported in part by the Natural Science Foundations of Zhejiang Province (China) under Project No. LY16A040002, the National Natural Science Foundations of China under Grants Nos. 61605170 and 11174250. The authors are also grateful to the Foundations of “Program of Zhejiang Leading Team of Science and Technology Innovation”.
Cite this paper
Zeng, R.X., Gu, J. and Shen, J.Q. (2017) Controllable Tunneling of Light through a Quantum-Dot-Mo- lecule Dielectric Film via Electromagnetically Induced Transparency. Optics and Pho- tonics Journal, 7, 49-67. https://doi.org/10.4236/opj.2017.78B008
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