| Literature DB >> 26982795 |
Andrés Granados Del Águila1,2, Esther Groeneveld3, Jan C Maan1,2, Celso de Mello Donegá3, Peter C M Christianen1,2.
Abstract
Wave function engineering has become a powerful tool to tailor the optical properties of semiconductor colloidal nanocrystals. Core-shell systems allow to design the spatial extent of the electron (e) and hole (h) wave functions in the conduction- and valence bands, respectively. However, tuning the overlap between the e- and h-wave functions not only affects the oscillator strength of the coupled e-h pairs (excitons) that are responsible for the light emission, but also modifies the e-h exchange interaction, leading to an altered excitonic energy spectrum. Here, we present exciton lifetime measurements in a strong magnetic field to determine the strength of the e-h exchange interaction, independently of the e-h overlap that is deduced from lifetime measurements at room temperature. We use a set of CdTe/CdSe core/shell heteronanocrystals in which the electron-hole separation is systematically varied. We are able to unravel the separate effects of e-h overlap and e-h exchange on the exciton lifetimes, and we present a simple model that fully describes the recombination lifetimes of heteronanostructures (HNCs) as a function of core volume, shell volume, temperature, and magnetic fields.Entities:
Keywords: core−shell heterostructure; electron−hole exchange; electron−hole overlap; excitons; magnetic field; nanocrystals
Year: 2016 PMID: 26982795 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b07158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881