| Literature DB >> 30150689 |
Shen Zhao1, Julien Lavie2, Loïc Rondin1, Lucile Orcin-Chaix1,2, Carole Diederichs3, Philippe Roussignol3, Yannick Chassagneux3, Christophe Voisin3, Klaus Müllen4, Akimitsu Narita4, Stéphane Campidelli2, Jean-Sébastien Lauret5.
Abstract
Graphene being a zero-gap material, considerable efforts have been made to develop semiconductors whose structure is compatible with its hexagonal lattice. Size reduction is a promising way to achieve this objective. The reduction of both dimensions of graphene leads to graphene quantum dots. Here, we report on a single-emitter study that directly addresses the intrinsic emission properties of graphene quantum dots. In particular, we show that they are efficient and stable single-photon emitters at room temperature and that their emission wavelength can be modified through the functionalization of their edges. Finally, the investigation of the intersystem crossing shows that the short triplet lifetime and the low crossing yield are in agreement with the high brightness of these quantum emitters. These results represent a step-forward in performing chemistry engineering for the design of quantum emitters.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30150689 PMCID: PMC6110725 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-05888-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Photoluminescence of single GQDs. a Chemical structure of the C96 and C96Cl GQDs. R stands for C12H25. b Scheme of the microphotoluminescence setup. c 20 × 20 μm2 PL map of the C96 GQDs in polystyrene matrix. The color bar represents the number of counts per second on the APD. The scale bar is 3 μm. The zoom shows a diffraction limited spot that can be fitted with a 2D Gaussian function leading to a 1/e2 diameter of ∼600 nm. The scale bar is 200 nm. d Room temperature PL spectra of a single C96 GQD (solid line) and of a single C96Cl GQD (dotted line). Polarization diagram in excitation (blue) and emission (red)
Fig. 2Photophysics of a single GQD. a Second-order correlation function g(2)(τ) recorded from a diffraction limited spot such as the one of Fig. 1 (black dots), showing a strong antibunching. A fit (red line) with a function yields g(2)(0) = 0.05 ± 0.05 and a characteristic time of τ1 ∼ 3.5 ns (FWHM of the IRF of the detector ∼0.9 ns). b Time-resolved PL of a single GQD (black dots) detected on the whole spectrum, fitted by a mono-exponential decay (red line) with a time constant τ = 5.37 ns. c Saturation curve of a single GQD (black dots) as a function of the pump power. A fit by Eq. (1) (red line) leads to a saturation power density of 28 kW cm−2 and a saturation intensity Isat ∼ 9.7 Mcounts/s. d PL time trace of a stable GQD over 100 min with a binning time of 200 ms. Fluctuations are due to setup instabilities. Zooms are shown on shorter timescale with a binning time of 10 ms
Fig. 3Photons bunching of a single GQD. a, b g(2) functions of a single GQD, for two different excitation powers, 2 μW (red square) and 10 μW (blue diamond). a Zoom on short delays; b Full timescale intensity correlation. The solid line is a fit to the function + , convolved by the time response of the detector. The three-level system used as a model is shown