Abstract
We studied the optical reflectivity of a specially grown double quantum well (DQW) structure characterized by a rectangular shape and a high electron density at room temperature. Assuming that the QWs depth is known, reflectivity spectra in the mid-IR range allow to carry out the precise measurements of the SAS-gap values (the energy gap between the symmetric and anti-symmetric states) and the absolute energies of both symmetric and antisymmetric electron states. The results of our experiments are in favor of the existence of the SAS splitting in the DQWs at room temperature. Here we have shown that the SAS gap increases proportionally to the subband quantum number and the optical electron transitions between symmetric and antisymmetric states belonging to different subbands are allowed. These results were used for interpretation of the beating effect in the Shubnikov-de Haas (SdH) oscillations at low temperatures (0.6 and 4.2 K). The approach to the calculation of the Landau-levels energies for DQW structures developed earlier [D. Ploch et al., Phys. Rev. B 79, 195434 (2009)] is used for the analysis and interpretation of the experimental data related to the beating effect. We also argue that in order to explain the beating effect in the SdH oscillations, one should introduce two different quasi-Fermi levels characterizing the two electron subsystems regarding symmetry properties of their wave functions, symmetric and antisymmetric ones. These states are not mixed neither by electron-electron interaction nor probably by electron-phonon interaction.
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