| Literature DB >> 29783640 |
Huiyan Liu1,2,3, Qian Dong4, Rene Lopez5,6.
Abstract
The oxidation speed of PbS quantum dots has been a subject of controversy for some time. In this study, we reveal the precise functional form of the oxidation rate constant for bare quantum dots through analysis of their photoluminescence as a function of temperature, oxygen pressure, and excitation-laser intensity. The combined effect of these factors results in a reduced energy barrier that allows the oxidation to proceed at a high rate. Each absorbed photon is found to have a 10-8 probability of oxidizing a PbS atomic pair. This highlights the importance of photo-excitation on the speed of the oxidation process, even at low illumination conditions. The procedure used here may set up a quantitative standard useful for characterizing the stability of quantum dots coated with ligands/linkers, and to compare different protection schemes in a fair quantitative way.Entities:
Keywords: PbS; kinetics of oxidation; photo-oxidation; photoluminescence; quantum dots
Year: 2018 PMID: 29783640 PMCID: PMC5977355 DOI: 10.3390/nano8050341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(a) Initial photoluminescence (PL) spectra of PLD-deposited PbS QDs with different number of laser shots (NLP). PL of the PbS QDs shows clearly red shift from 680 to 820 nm. This obvious shift is a consequence of the quantum size effects of the PbS QDs [16]; (b) XRD pattern of PbS QDs deposited with NLP = 500; (c) TEM image of PbS QDs deposited directly onto carbon-filmed-grids; the inset in (c) is their TEM diffraction pattern.
Figure 2(a) Typical of the photoluminescence spectrum for the PbS QDs, all the experiments presented similar behavior but with marked time differences depending on the exact environmental conditions. (b–d) XPS Pb 4f7/2 spectrum of the freshly deposited, after laser-irradiation until reached maximum PL intensity, and after PL intensity decayed, respectively. The XPS measurement was conducted using a ThermoFisher ESCALAB 250XI Analyzer with base pressure below 10−10 mbar. Al Kα (1486.6 eV) radiation was used as an X-ray source (15 kV, 159.3 W).
Figure 3Time evolution of the photoluminescence integrated intensity for the PbS QDs, under three distinct experimental conditions: (a) Variation over laser power with 1 atmosphere of oxygen pressure and constant temperature (294 K), (b) variation under different oxygen pressures at room temperature and 1.54 × 104 W/cm2 light intensity, and (c) temperature effect at constant pressure (1 atmosphere) and same constant laser power. Solid lines are fit to the physical model described in the text.
Figure 4(a,b) parameters A and B under different light intensities at 294 K and 1 atmosphere of oxygen, respectively; (c) Parameter B as function of pressure at 294 K and 1.54 × 104 W/cm2 light intensity; (d) Parameter B as function of temperature at 1 atmosphere and same light intensity. Dots are the specific parameters that produce the fitted curves in Figure 3. Solid lines are best fits to funcional forms of those parameters vs. the controlled enviromental variables as explained in detail in the Discussion section.