| Literature DB >> 22931255 |
Yuri V Vorobiev1, Paul P Horley, Jorge Hernández-Borja, Hilda E Esparza-Ponce, Rafael Ramírez-Bon, Pavel Vorobiev, Claudia Pérez, Jesús González-Hernández.
Abstract
This paper is dedicated to study the thin polycrystalline films of semiconductor chalcogenide materials (CdS, CdSe, and PbS) obtained by ammonia-free chemical bath deposition. The obtained material is of polycrystalline nature with crystallite of a size that, from a general point of view, should not result in any noticeable quantum confinement. Nevertheless, we were able to observe blueshift of the fundamental absorption edge and reduced refractive index in comparison with the corresponding bulk materials. Both effects are attributed to the material porosity which is a typical feature of chemical bath deposition technique. The blueshift is caused by quantum confinement in pores, whereas the refractive index variation is the evident result of the density reduction. Quantum mechanical description of the nanopores in semiconductor is given based on the application of even mirror boundary conditions for the solution of the Schrödinger equation; the results of calculations give a reasonable explanation of the experimental data.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22931255 PMCID: PMC3475102 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-7-483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1 Transmission spectrum of 0.5-μm thick CdSe film.
Figure 2 Diagram used to determine bandgap of PbS CBD sample with growth time of 3 h. The value of D corresponds to optical density.
Figure 3 Refractive index of CdSe. Squares indicate the data for the bulk material adapted from [14], and circles correspond to CBD film.
Figure 4 Optical constantsof PbS CBD films with different deposition times.
Figure 5 Dependence of the grain size of PbS CBD samples on growth time. The line is given as eye guide only.
Energy spectra of different QDs
| Energy spectrum |
Here, n is a quantum number, and m is the effective mass of the particle.