RESUMO
We performed x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurements on a thin film of Si nanocrystals (SiNCs) while applying DC or AC external biases to extract the resistance and the capacitance of the thin film. The measurement consists of the application of 10 V DC or square wave pulses of 10 V amplitude to the sample at various frequencies ranging from 0.01 to 1 MHz while recording x-ray photoemission data. To analyze the data, we propose three different models with varying degrees of accuracy. The calculated capacitance of SiNCs agrees with the experimental value in the literature.
RESUMO
Using a combination of density-gradient and analytical ultracentrifugation, we studied the photophysical profile of CsPbBr3 nanocrystal (NC) suspensions by separating them into size-resolved fractions. Ultracentrifugation drastically alters the ligand profile of the NCs, which necessitates postprocessing to restore colloidal stability and enhance quantum yield (QY). Rejuvenated fractions show a 50% increase in QY compared to no treatment and a 30% increase with respect to the parent. Our results demonstrate how the NC environment can be manipulated to improve photophysical performance, even after there has been a measurable decline in the response. Size separation reveals blue-emitting fractions, a narrowing of photoluminescence spectra in comparison to the parent, and a crossover from single- to stretched-exponential relaxation dynamics with decreasing NC size. As a function of edge length, L, our results confirm that the photoluminescence peak energy scales a L-2, in agreement with the simplest picture of quantum confinement.
RESUMO
Silicon nanocrystals (SiNCs) with bright bandgap photoluminescence (PL) are of current interest for a range of potential applications, from solar windows to biomedical contrast agents. Here, we use the liquid precursor cyclohexasilane (Si6H12) for the plasma synthesis of colloidal SiNCs with exemplary core emission. Through size separation executed in an oxygen-shielded environment, we achieve PL quantum yields (QYs) approaching 70% while exposing intrinsic constraints on efficient core emission from smaller SiNCs. Time-resolved PL spectra of these fractions in response to femtosecond pulsed excitation reveal a zero-phonon radiative channel that anticorrelates with QY, which we model using advanced computational methods applied to a 2 nm SiNC. Our results offer additional insight into the photophysical interplay of the nanocrystal surface, quasi-direct recombination, and efficient SiNC core PL.