Abstract

We report measurements of low-temperature luminescence spectra, lifetime, and excitation spectra for excitons in ${\mathrm{Ga}}_{1\ensuremath{-}x}{\mathrm{Al}}_{x}\mathrm{As}$ (${x}_{c}lxl0.55$, where ${x}_{c}=0.435$ is the direct-to-indirect crossover value) over a wide range of excitation levels. The no-phonon line, \ensuremath{\sim}6 meV wide, decays nonexponentially at low excitation levels. The decay rate depends strongly on excitation intensity and on temperature (for $2lTl30$ K) while the position and width remain unchanged. We show that in the low-temperature, low-excitation limit, the nonexponential decay, and its dependence on $x$, can be quantitatively explained in terms of emission from a small number of localized indirect excitons scattered by alloy fluctuations. Above 8 K these excitons become mobile and their decay is exponential. Most of the excitons are mobile even at 2 K. They dominate the emission when the excitation is sufficiently strong to neutralize the ionized impurities, which quench the luminescence at low intensities. The localized excitons show strong LO-phonon sidebands, while the mobile ones do not. The theory of the decay rate yields a mean value of the scattering strength $J\ensuremath{\sim}0.2$ eV, in reasonable agreement with estimates from the Al-Ga electronegativity difference. The nitrogen-bound exciton with a wide range of binding energies, previously reported in ion-implanted samples, is found to be split, possibly by a disorder-induced axial field.

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