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1.
Nanoscale ; 11(25): 12230-12241, 2019 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31204756

ABSTRACT

CdSe nanoplatelets can be synthesized with different lateral sizes; very small nanoplatelets have almost quantum dot like features (almost discrete exciton states), while very large ones are expected to have properties of colloidal quantum wells (exciton continuum). However, nanoplatelets can be in an intermediate confinement regime with a rich substructure of excitons, which is neither quantum dot like nor an ideal 2D exciton. In this manuscript, we discuss the experimental transition energies and relaxation dynamics of exciton states in CdSe platelets with varying lateral dimensions and compare them with a microscopic theoretical model including exciton-phonon scattering. The model takes special care of the interplay of confinement and Coulomb coupling in the intermediate regime showing strong changes with respect to simple weak or strong confinement models by solving the full four dimensional lateral factorization free exciton wavefunction. Depending on the platelet size broad resonances previously attributed to just ground and excited states are actually composed of a rich substructure of several exciton states in their temporal dynamics. We show that these factorization free exciton states can explain the spectral features observed in photoluminescence experiments. Furthermore we demonstrate that the interplay of exciton bright and dark states provides principle insights into the overall temporal relaxation dynamics, and allows tuning of the exciton cooling via lateral platelet size. Our results and theoretical approach are directly relevant for understanding e.g. the size tuneability of lasing, excitonic cooling dynamics or light harvesting applications in these and similar 2D systems of finite lateral size.

2.
Nanoscale ; 11(9): 3958-3967, 2019 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30762858

ABSTRACT

In a comparative study we investigate the carrier-phonon coupling in CdSe based core-only and hetero 2D as well as 0D nanoparticles. We demonstrate that the coupling can be strongly tuned by the lateral size of nanoplatelets, while, due to the weak lateral confinement, the transition energies are only altered by tens of meV. Our analysis shows that an increase in the lateral platelet area results in a strong decrease in the phonon coupling to acoustic modes due to deformation potential interaction, yielding an exciton deformation potential of 3.0 eV in line with theory. In contrast, coupling to optical modes tends to increase with the platelet area. This cannot be explained by Fröhlich interaction, which is generally dominant in II-VI materials. We compare CdSe/CdS nanoplatelets with their equivalent, spherical CdSe/CdS nanoparticles. Universally, in both systems the introduction of a CdS shell is shown to result in an increase of the average phonon coupling, mainly related to an increase of the coupling to acoustic modes, while the coupling to optical modes is reduced with increasing CdS layer thickness. The demonstrated size and CdS overgrowth tunability has strong implications for applications like tuning carrier cooling and carrier multiplication - relevant for solar energy harvesting applications. Other implications range from transport in nanosystems e.g. for field effect transistors or dephasing control. Our results open up a new toolbox for the design of photonic materials.

3.
ACS Nano ; 12(9): 9476-9483, 2018 Sep 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30192515

ABSTRACT

We investigate the impact of shell growth on the carrier dynamics and exciton-phonon coupling in CdSe-CdS core-shell nanoplatelets with varying shell thickness. We observe that the recombination dynamics can be prolonged by more than one order of magnitude, and analyze the results in a global rate model as well as with simulations including strain and excitonic effects. We reveal that type I band alignment in the hetero platelets is maintained at least up to three monolayers of CdS, resulting in approximately constant radiative rates. Hence, observed changes of decay dynamics are not the result of an increasingly different electron and hole exciton wave function delocalization as often assumed, but an increasingly better passivation of nonradiative surface defects by the shell. Based on a global analysis of time-resolved and time-integrated data, we recover and model the temperature dependent quantum yield of these nanostructures and show that CdS shell growth leads to a strong enhancement of the photoluminescence quantum yield. Our results explain, for example, the very high lasing gain observed in CdSe-CdS nanoplatelets due to the type I band alignment that also makes them interesting as solar energy concentrators. Further, we reveal that the exciton-LO-phonon coupling is strongly tunable by the CdS shell thickness, enabling emission line width and coherence length control.

4.
Nano Lett ; 17(10): 6321-6329, 2017 10 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28898091

ABSTRACT

We show that two-photon absorption (TPA) is highly anisotropic in CdSe nanoplatelets, thus promoting them as a new class of directional two-photon absorbers with large cross sections. Comparing two-dimensional k-space spectroscopic measurements of the one-photon and two-photon excitation of an oriented monolayer of platelets, it is revealed that TPA into the continuum is a directional phenomenon. This is in contrast to one-photon absorption. The observed directional TPA is shown to be related to fundamental band anisotropies of zincblende CdSe and the ultrastrong anisotropic confinement. We recover the internal transition dipole distribution and find that this directionality arises from the intrinsic directionality of the underlying Bloch and envelope functions of the states involved. We note that the photoemission from the CdSe platelets is highly anisotropic following either one- or two-photon excitation. Given the directionality and high TPA cross-section of these platelets, they may, for example, find employment as efficient logic AND elements in integrated photonic devices, or directional photon converters.

5.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 12(12): 1155-1160, 2017 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28920964

ABSTRACT

Intrinsically directional light emitters are potentially important for applications in photonics including lasing and energy-efficient display technology. Here, we propose a new route to overcome intrinsic efficiency limitations in light-emitting devices by studying a CdSe nanoplatelets monolayer that exhibits strongly anisotropic, directed photoluminescence. Analysis of the two-dimensional k-space distribution reveals the underlying internal transition dipole distribution. The observed directed emission is related to the anisotropy of the electronic Bloch states governing the exciton transition dipole moment and forming a bright plane. The strongly directed emission perpendicular to the platelet is further enhanced by the optical local density of states and local fields. In contrast to the emission directionality, the off-resonant absorption into the energetically higher 2D-continuum of states is isotropic. These contrasting optical properties make the oriented CdSe nanoplatelets, or superstructures of parallel-oriented platelets, an interesting and potentially useful class of semiconductor-based emitters.

6.
Nano Lett ; 16(10): 6576-6583, 2016 10 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27646777

ABSTRACT

We present a study of the application potential of CdSe nanoplatelets (NPLs), a model system for colloidal 2D materials, as field-controlled emitters. We demonstrate that their emission can be changed by 28% upon application of electrical fields up to 175 kV/cm, a very high modulation depth for field-controlled nanoemitters. From our experimental results we estimate the exciton binding energy in 5.5 monolayer CdSe nanoplatelets to be EB = 170 meV; hence CdSe NPLs exhibit highly robust excitons which are stable even at room temperature. This opens up the possibility to tune the emission and recombination dynamics efficiently by external fields. Our analysis further allows a quantitative discrimination of spectral changes of the emission energy and changes in PL intensity related to broadening of the emission line width as well as changes in the intrinsic radiative rates which are directly connected to the measured changes in the PL decay dynamics. With the developed field-dependent population model treating all occurring field-dependent effects in a global analysis, we are able to quantify, e.g., the ground state exciton transition dipole moment (3.0 × 10-29 Cm) and its polarizability, which determine the radiative rate, as well as the (static) exciton polarizability (8.6 × 10-8 eV cm2/kV2), all in good agreement with theory. Our results show that an efficient field control over the exciton recombination dynamics, emission line width, and emission energy in these nanoparticles is feasible and opens up application potential as field-controlled emitters.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 116(11): 116802, 2016 Mar 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27035317

ABSTRACT

We evidence excited state emission from p states well below ground state saturation in CdSe nanoplatelets. Size-dependent exciton ground and excited state energies and population dynamics are determined by four independent methods: time-resolved PL, time-integrated PL, rate equation modeling, and Hartree renormalized k·p calculations-all in very good agreement. The ground state-excited state energy spacing strongly increases with the lateral platelet quantization. Depending on its detuning to the LO phonon energy, the PL decay of CdSe platelets is governed by a size tunable LO phonon bottleneck, related to the low exciton-phonon coupling, very large oscillator strength, and energy spacing of both states. This is, for instance, ideal to tune lasing properties. CdSe platelets are perfectly suited to control the exciton-phonon interaction by changing their lateral size while the optical transition energy is determined by their thickness.

8.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 18(4): 3197-203, 2016 Jan 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26743562

ABSTRACT

We investigate the temperature-dependent decay kinetics of type II CdSe-CdTe and CdTe-CdSe core-lateral shell nanoplatelets. From a kinetic analysis of the photoluminescence (PL) decay and a measurement of the temperature dependent quantum yield we deduce the temperature dependence of the non-radiative and radiative lifetimes of hetero nanoplates. In line with the predictions of the giant oscillator strength effect in 2D we observe a strong increase of the radiative lifetime with temperature. This is attributed to an increase of the homogeneous transition linewidth with temperature. Comparing core only and hetero platelets we observe a significant prolongation of the radiative lifetime in type II platelets by two orders in magnitude while the quantum yield is barely affected. In a careful analysis of the PL decay transients we compare different recombination models, including electron hole pairs and exciton decay, being relevant for the applicability of those structures in photonic applications like solar cells or lasers. We conclude that the observed biexponential PL decay behavior in hetero platelets is predominately due to spatially indirect excitons being present at the hetero junction and not ionized e-h pair recombination.

9.
Nano Lett ; 15(8): 4985-92, 2015 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26190135

ABSTRACT

We report a comprehensive study on the two-photon absorption cross sections of colloidal CdSe nanoplatelets, -rods, and -dots of different sizes by the means of z-scan and two-photon excitation spectroscopy. Platelets combine large particle volumes with ultra strong confinement. In contrast to weakly confined nanocrystals, the TPA cross sections of CdSe nanoplatelets scale superlinearly with volume (V(∼2)) and show ten times more efficient two-photon absorption than nanorods or dots. This unexpectedly strong shape dependence goes well beyond the effect of local fields. The larger the particles' aspect ratio, the greater is the confinement related electronic contribution to the increased two-photon absorption. Both electronic confinement and local field effects favor the platelets and make them unique two-photon absorbers with outstanding cross sections of up to 10(7) GM, the largest ever reported for (colloidal) semiconductor nanocrystals and ideally suited for two-photon imaging and nonlinear optoelectronics. The obtained results are confirmed by two independent techniques as well as a new self-referencing method.

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