| Literature DB >> 28140563 |
Samuel L Brown1, Joseph B Miller1, Rebecca J Anthony2, Uwe R Kortshagen2, Andrei Kryjevski1, Erik K Hobbie1.
Abstract
Intrinsic constraints on efficient photoluminescence (PL) from smaller alkene-capped silicon nanocrystals (SiNCs) put limits on potential applications, but the root cause of such effects remains elusive. Here, plasma-synthesized colloidal SiNCs separated into monodisperse fractions reveal an abrupt size-dependent partitioning of multilevel PL relaxation, which we study as a function of temperature. Guided by theory and simulation, we explore the potential role of resonant phonon interactions with "minigaps" that emerge in the electronic density of states (DOS) under strong quantum confinement. Such higher-order structures can be very sensitive to SiNC surface chemistry, which we suggest might explain the common implication of surface effects in both the emergence of multimodal PL relaxation and the loss of quantum yield with decreasing nanocrystal size. Our results have potentially profound implications for optimizing the radiative recombination kinetics and quantum yield of smaller ligand-passivated SiNCs.Entities:
Keywords: photoluminescence; quantum confinement; silicon nanocrystals; surface effects
Year: 2017 PMID: 28140563 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b07285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881