| Literature DB >> 31914766 |
Shin Hum Cho1, Kevin M Roccapriore2, Chandriker Kavir Dass3, Sandeep Ghosh1, Junho Choi4, Jungchul Noh1, Lauren C Reimnitz1, Sungyeon Heo1, Kihoon Kim1, Karen Xie1, Brian A Korgel1, Xiaoqin Li4, Joshua R Hendrickson3, Jordan A Hachtel2, Delia J Milliron1.
Abstract
A synthetic challenge in faceted metal oxide nanocrystals (NCs) is realizing tunable localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) near-field response in the infrared (IR). Cube-shaped nanoparticles of noble metals exhibit LSPR spectral tunability limited to visible spectral range. Here, we describe the colloidal synthesis of fluorine, tin codoped indium oxide (F,Sn:In2O3) NC cubes with tunable IR range LSPR for around 10 nm particle sizes. Free carrier concentration is tuned through controlled Sn dopant incorporation, where Sn is an aliovalent n-type dopant in the In2O3 lattice. F shapes the NC morphology into cubes by functioning as a surfactant on the {100} crystallographic facets. Cube shaped F,Sn:In2O3 NCs exhibit narrow, shape-dependent multimodal LSPR due to corner, edge, and face centered modes. Monolayer NC arrays are fabricated through a liquid-air interface assembly, further demonstrating tunable LSPR response as NC film nanocavities that can heighten near-field enhancement (NFE). The tunable F,Sn:In2O3 NC near-field is coupled with PbS quantum dots, via the Purcell effect. The detuning frequency between the nanocavity and exciton is varied, resulting in IR near-field dependent enhanced exciton lifetime decay. LSPR near-field tunability is directly visualized through IR range scanning transmission electron microscopy-electron energy loss spectroscopy (STEM-EELS). STEM-EELS mapping of the spatially confined near-field in the F,Sn:In2O3 NC array interparticle gap demonstrates elevated NFE tunability in the arrays.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31914766 DOI: 10.1063/1.5139050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chem Phys ISSN: 0021-9606 Impact factor: 3.488