RESUMEN
In semiconductors, exciton or charge carrier diffusivity is typically described as an inherent material property. Here, we show that the transport of excitons among CsPbBr3 perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) depends markedly on how recently those NCs were occupied by a previous exciton. Using transient photoluminescence microscopy, we observe a striking dependence of the apparent exciton diffusivity on excitation laser power that does not arise from nonlinear exciton-exciton interactions or thermal heating. We interpret our observations with a model in which excitons cause NCs to transition to a long-lived metastable configuration that markedly increases exciton transport. The exciton diffusivity observed here (>0.15 square centimeters per second) is considerably higher than that observed in other NC systems, revealing unusually strong excitonic coupling between NCs. The finding of a persistent enhancement in excitonic coupling may help explain other photophysical behaviors observed in CsPbBr3 NCs, such as superfluorescence, and inform the design of optoelectronic devices.
RESUMEN
Lead halide perovskite nanocrystals (LHP NCs) are an emerging materials system with broad potential applications, including as emitters of quantum light. We apply design principles aimed at the structural optimization of surface ligand species for CsPbBr3 NCs, leading us to the study of LHP NCs with dicationic quaternary ammonium bromide ligands. Through the selection of linking groups and aliphatic backbones guided by experiments and computational support, we demonstrate consistently narrow photoluminescence line shapes with a full-width-at-half-maximum below 70 meV. We observe bulk-like Stokes shifts throughout our range of particle sizes, from 7 to 16 nm. At cryogenic temperatures, we find sub-200 ps lifetimes, significant photon coherence, and the fraction of photons emitted into the coherent channel increasing markedly to 86%. A 4-fold reduction in inhomogeneous broadening from previous work paves the way for the integration of LHP NC emitters into nanophotonic architectures to enable advanced quantum optical investigation.
RESUMEN
Organic-inorganic hybrid materials present new opportunities for creating low-dimensional structures with unique light-matter interaction. In this work, we report a chemically robust yellow emissive one-dimensional (1D) semiconductor, silver 2,6-difluorophenylselenolateâAgSePhF2(2,6), a new member of the broader class of hybrid low-dimensional semiconductors, metal-organic chalcogenolates. While silver phenylselenolate (AgSePh) crystallizes as a two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals semiconductor, introduction of fluorine atoms at the (2,6) position of the phenyl ring induces a structural transition from 2D sheets to 1D chains. Density functional theory calculations reveal that AgSePhF2 (2,6) has strongly dispersive conduction and valence bands along the 1D crystal axis. Visible photoluminescence centered around λp ≈ 570 nm at room temperature exhibits both prompt (110 ps) and delayed (36 ns) components. The absorption spectrum exhibits excitonic resonances characteristic of low-dimensional hybrid semiconductors, with an exciton binding energy of approximately 170 meV as determined by temperature-dependent photoluminescence. The discovery of an emissive 1D silver organoselenolate highlights the structural and compositional richness of the chalcogenolate material family and provides new insights for molecular engineering of low-dimensional hybrid organic-inorganic semiconductors.
RESUMEN
Transient microscopy has emerged as a powerful tool for imaging the diffusion of excitons and free charge carriers in optoelectronic materials. In many excitonic materials, extraction of diffusion coefficients can be simplified because of the linear relationship between signal intensity and local excited state population. However, in materials where transport is dominated by free charge carriers, extracting diffusivities accurately from multidimensional data is complicated by the nonlinear dependence of the measured signal on the local charge carrier density. To obtain accurate estimates of charge carrier diffusivity from transient microscopy data, statistically robust fitting algorithms coupled to efficient 3D numerical solvers that faithfully relate local carrier dynamics to raw experimental measurables are sometimes needed. Here, we provide a detailed numerical framework for modeling the spatiotemporal dynamics of free charge carriers in bulk semiconductors with significant solving speed reduction and for simulating the corresponding transient photoluminescence microscopy data. To demonstrate the utility of this approach, we apply a fitting algorithm using a Markov chain Monte Carlo sampler to experimental data on bulk CdS and methylammonium lead bromide (MAPbBr3) crystals. Parameter analyses reveal that transient photoluminescence microscopy can be used to obtain robust estimates of charge carrier diffusivities in optoelectronic materials of interest, but that other experimental approaches should be used for obtaining carrier recombination constants. Additionally, simplifications can be made to the fitting model depending on the experimental conditions and material systems studied. Our open-source simulation code and fitting algorithm are made freely available to the scientific community.
RESUMEN
Anisotropic strain engineering has emerged as a powerful strategy for enhancing the optoelectronic performance of semiconductor nanocrystals. Here, we show that CdSe/CdS dot-in-rod structures offer a platform for fine-tuning the optical response of CdSe quantum dots through anisotropic strain. By controlling the spatial position of the CdSe core within a growing CdS nanorod shell, varying degrees of uniaxial strain can be introduced. Placing CdSe cores at the end of the CdS nanorod induces strong asymmetric compression along the c-axis of the wurtzite CdSe core, dramatically altering its absorption and emission characteristics, whereas CdSe cores located near the middle of the nanorod experience a comparatively weak uniaxial strain field. The change in absorption and emission spectra and dynamics for highly strained end-position CdSe/CdS nanorods is explained by (1) relative shifting of the valence band light hole and heavy hole levels and (2) introduction of a strong piezoelectric potential, which spatially separates the electron and hole wave functions. The ability to tune the degree of uniaxial strain through core position control in a nanorod structure creates opportunities for precisely modulating the electronic properties of CdSe nanocrystals while simultaneously taking advantage of dielectric and optical anisotropies intrinsic to 1D nanostructures.
RESUMEN
Silver phenylselenolate (AgSePh) is a hybrid organic-inorganic two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor exhibiting narrow blue emission, in-plane anisotropy, and large exciton binding energy. Here, we show that the addition of carefully chosen solvent vapors during the chemical transformation of metallic silver to AgSePh allows for control over the size and orientation of AgSePh crystals. By testing 28 solvent vapors (with different polarities, boiling points, and functional groups), we controlled the resulting crystal size from <200 nm up to a few µm. Furthermore, choice of solvent vapor can substantially improve the orientational homogeneity of 2D crystals with respect to the substrate. In particular, solvents known to form complexes with silver ions, such as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), led to the largest lateral crystal dimensions and parallel crystal orientation. We perform systematic optical and electrical characterizations on DMSO vapor-grown AgSePh films demonstrating improved crystalline quality, lower defect densities, higher photoconductivity, lower dark conductivity, suppression of ionic migration, and reduced midgap photoluminescence at low temperature. Overall, this work provides a strategy for realizing AgSePh films with improved optical properties and reveals the roles of solvent vapors on the chemical transformation of metallic silver.
RESUMEN
Substitutional metal doping is a powerful strategy for manipulating the emission spectra and excited state dynamics of semiconductor nanomaterials. Here, we demonstrate the synthesis of colloidal manganese (Mn2+)-doped organic-inorganic hybrid perovskite nanoplatelets (chemical formula: L2[APb1-xMnxBr3]n-1Pb1-xMnxBr4; L, butylammonium; A, methylammonium or formamidinium; n (= 1 or 2), number of Pb1-xMnxBr64- octahedral layers in thickness) via a ligand-assisted reprecipitation method. Substitutional doping of manganese for lead introduces bright (approaching 100% efficiency) and long-lived (>500 µs) midgap Mn2+ atomic states, and the doped nanoplatelets exhibit dual emission from both the band edge and the dopant state. Photoluminescence quantum yields and band-edge-to-Mn intensity ratios exhibit strong excitation power dependence, even at a very low incident intensity (<100 µW/cm2). Surprisingly, we find that the saturation of long-lived Mn2+ dopant sites cannot explain our observation. Instead, we propose an alternative mechanism involving the cross-relaxation of long-lived Mn-site excitations by freely diffusing band-edge excitons. We formulate a kinetic model based on this cross-relaxation mechanism that quantitatively reproduces all of the experimental observations and validate the model using time-resolved absorption and emission spectroscopy. Finally, we extract a concentration-normalized microscopic rate constant for band edge-to-dopant excitation transfer that is â¼10× faster in methylammonium-containing nanoplatelets than in formamidinium-containing nanoplatelets. This work provides fundamental insight into the interaction of mobile band edge excitons with localized dopant sites in 2D semiconductors and expands the toolbox for manipulating light emission in perovskite nanomaterials.
RESUMEN
Fundamental photophysical behavior in CsPbBr3 nanocrystals (NCs), especially at low temperatures, is under active investigation. While many studies have reported temperature-dependent photoluminescence, comparatively few have focused on understanding the temperature-dependent absorption spectrum. Here, we report the temperature-dependent (35-300 K) absorption and photoluminescence spectra of zwitterionic ligand-capped CsPbBr3 NCs with four different edge lengths (d = 4.9, 7.2, 8.1, and 13.2 nm). The two lowest-energy excitonic transitions are quantitatively modeled over the full temperature range within the effective mass approximation considering the quasi-cubic NC shape and nonparabolicity of the electronic bands. Significantly, we find that the effective dielectric constant determined from the best fit model parameters is independent of temperature. Moreover, we observe a temperature-dependent Stokes shift that saturates at a finite value of Δ ≈ 10 meV at low temperatures for d = 7.2 nm NCs, which is absent in bulk CsPbBr3 films. Overall, these observations highlight differences between the temperature-dependent dielectric behavior of NC and bulk perovskites and point to the need for a more unified theoretical understanding of absorption and emission in halide perovskites.
RESUMEN
The movement of charge carriers within semiconductor nanocrystal solids is fundamental to the operation of nanocrystal devices, including solar cells, LEDs, lasers, photodetectors, and thermoelectric modules. In this perspective, we explain how recent advances in the measurement and simulation of charge carrier dynamics in nanocrystal solids have led to a more complete picture of mesoscale interactions. Specifically, we show how time-resolved optical spectroscopy and transient photocurrent techniques can be used to track both equilibrium and non-equilibrium dynamics in nanocrystal solids. We discuss the central role of energetic disorder, the impact of trap states, and how these critical parameters are influenced by chemical modification of the nanocrystal surface. Finally, we close with a forward-looking assessment of emerging nanocrystal systems, including anisotropic nanocrystals, such as nanoplatelets, and colloidal lead halide perovskites.
RESUMEN
Complete structural characterization of colloidal nanocrystals is challenging due to rapid variation in the electronic, vibrational, and elemental properties across the nanocrystal surface. While electron microscopy and X-ray scattering techniques can provide detailed information about the inorganic nanocrystal core, these techniques provide little information about the molecular ligands coating the nanocrystal surface. Moreover, because most models for scattering data are parametrically nonlinear, uncertainty estimates for parameters are challenging to formulate robustly. Here, using oleate-capped PbS quantum dots as a model system, we demonstrate the capability of small angle neutron scattering (SANS) in resolving core, ligand-shell, and solvent structure for well-dispersed nanocrystals using a single technique. SANS scattering data collected at eight separate solvent deuteration fractions were used to characterize the structure of the nanocrystals in reciprocal space. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to develop a coarse-grained form factor describing the scattering length density profile of ligand-stabilized nanocrystals in solution. We introduce an affine invariant Markov chain Monte Carlo method to efficiently perform nonlinear parameter estimation for the form factor describing such dilute solutions. This technique yields robust uncertainty estimates. This experimental design is broadly applicable across colloidal nanocrystal material systems including emergent perovskite nanocrystals, and the parameter estimation protocol significantly accelerates characterization and provides new insights into the atomic and molecular structure of colloidal nanomaterials.