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Thermally activated delayed photoluminescence from pyrenyl-functionalized CdSe quantum dots
- Source :
- Nature Chemistry. 10:225-230
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.
-
Abstract
- The generation and transfer of triplet excitons across semiconductor nanomaterial-molecular interfaces will play an important role in emerging photonic and optoelectronic technologies, and understanding the rules that govern such phenomena is essential. The ability to cooperatively merge the photophysical properties of semiconductor quantum dots with those of well-understood and inexpensive molecular chromophores is therefore paramount. Here we show that 1-pyrenecarboxylic acid-functionalized CdSe quantum dots undergo thermally activated delayed photoluminescence. This phenomenon results from a near quantitative triplet-triplet energy transfer from the nanocrystals to 1-pyrenecarboxylic acid, producing a molecular triplet-state 'reservoir' that thermally repopulates the photoluminescent state of CdSe through endothermic reverse triplet-triplet energy transfer. The photoluminescence properties are systematically and predictably tuned through variation of the quantum dot-molecule energy gap, temperature and the triplet-excited-state lifetime of the molecular adsorbate. The concepts developed are likely to be applicable to semiconductor nanocrystals interfaced with molecular chromophores, enabling potential applications of their combined excited states.
- Subjects :
- Photoluminescence
Condensed Matter::Other
business.industry
Band gap
Chemistry
General Chemical Engineering
Exciton
02 engineering and technology
General Chemistry
Chromophore
Condensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall Effect
010402 general chemistry
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
01 natural sciences
0104 chemical sciences
Condensed Matter::Materials Science
Semiconductor
Nanocrystal
Quantum dot
Excited state
Optoelectronics
0210 nano-technology
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17554349 and 17554330
- Volume :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature Chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....798f133fda30b87cacba384d3778e3da
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nchem.2906