Schottky-barrier electroreflectance of Ge: Nondegenerate and orbitally degenerate critical points
- 15 September 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 12 (6) , 2297-2310
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.12.2297
Abstract
Critical-point energies, broadening parameters, line-shape asymmetries, interband reduced masses, and polarization anisotropies are measured for the , , , , , , , , , , and transitions in Ge using the Schottky-barrier electroreflectance (ER) method. The Keldysh-Konstantinov-Perel' (KKP) approximation for orbitally degenerate critical points is adapted to heavy holes and to Franz-Keldysh oscillations. Stark-shift effects are shown to be important only for energies within of , negligible in this experiment. The KKP prediction that orbitally degenerate ER line shapes are represented as a linear superposition of nondegenerate line shapes is verified by separating explicitly the light-hole and heavy-hole contributions to the structure at intermediate fields. The polarization anisotropies are in qualitative agreement with KKP predictions, but the light-hole spectrum is much too large. Therefore, either the KKP matrix-element magnitudes or the calculated densities of states do not represent correctly the experimental conditions. Low-field line-shape asymmetries for and are in excellent agreement with two-dimensional model density-of-states calculations. We observe a cusp less than 2 meV wide at threshold on spectra for which the intrinsic energy scale meV, verifying remarkably well the prediction of a functional singularity at threshold in ER theory. The and line shapes show polarization anisotropies of 1.32±0.02 and 1.20±0.02 at 300 and 10 K, respectively, for [110] fields, compared to a theoretical value of 4/3. Significant field-dependent polarization anisotropies are observed for the triplet, in qualitative agreement with the KKP approximation and in contrast to the predictions of nondegenerate theory. Heavy-electron-hole transitions appear to dominate the center structure of the triplet. The polarization anisotropy of 1.85 observed for the transition shows that the critical point responsible is a saddle point. The structures are resolved into three components. The larger energy separation, 266±10 meV, for the two lower components of points responsible is not the same as that for the transitions, which have a spin-orbit splitting of 184±2 meV.
Keywords
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