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D. S. Chemla and D. A. B. Miller,
"Room-Temperature Excitonic Nonlinear-Optical Effects in Semiconductor Quantum-Well
Structures," J. Opt. Soc. Am. B2,1155-1173 (1985).
The authors review the nonlinear-optical effects observed at room temperature in
semiconductor quantum-well structures photoexcited near the band gap. A comprehensive
discussion of optical transitions in these microstructures is given, including excitonic
effects and the specific features of room-temperature exciton resonances. Experimental
investigations using continuous-wave, picosecond-, and femtosecond-laser sources are
presented. They show extremely efficient nonlinear processes. In the case of excitations
that are long compared with the exciton-ionization time, the induced changes in absorption
and refraction do not depend on the wavelength or on the duration of excitation. These
changes depend only on the density of absorbed photons and are interpreted in terms of
electron-hole plasma screening and band filling. In contrast, for ultrashort excitation,
nonlinear processes depend critically on the excitation wavelength. The selective
generation of excitons is found to produce effects larger than a plasma of the same
density. This unexpected result is shown to arise from the low temperature of the exciton
gas before it interacts with the lattice and from the decrease of screening that is the
reduced dimensionality of quantum-well structures
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