6 research outputs found
Effect of Morphology on Ultrafast Carrier Dynamics in Asymmetric GoldâIron Oxide Plasmonic Heterodimers
Understanding how nanoscale interfaces affect electrical
and optical
properties of multifunctional nanocrystal heterostructures is of paramount
importance for their technological application. In this context, we
investigated the ultrafast carrier dynamics of rodlike goldâiron
oxide nanocrystal heterodimers, in a spectral region close to the
surface plasmon resonance frequency, by means of broad-band transient
absorption spectroscopy. We found that the electronâphonon
relaxation time is independent of the morphology of the iron oxide
domain. Moreover, we revealed a transient shift in the surface plasmon
resonance frequency, which can be related to charge transfer at the
interface between gold and iron oxide
Plasmon Bleaching Dynamics in Colloidal GoldâIron Oxide Nanocrystal Heterodimers
Colloidal nanocrystal heterodimers composed of a plasmonic
and a magnetic domain have been widely studied as potential materials
for various applications in nanomedicine, biology, and photocatalysis.
One of the most popular nanocrystal heterodimers is represented by
a structure made of a Au domain and a iron oxide domain joined together.
Understanding the nature of the interface between the two domains
in such type of dimer and how this influences the energy relaxation
processes is a key issue. Here, we present the first broad-band transient
absorption study on gold/iron oxide nanocrystal heterodimers that
explains how the energy relaxation is affected by the presence of
such interface. We found faster electronâelectron and electronâphonon
relaxation times for the gold ânestedâ in the iron oxide
domain in the heterodimers with respect to gold âonlyâ
nanocrystals, that is, free-standing gold nanocrystals in solution.
We relate this effect to the decreased electron screening caused by
spill-out of the gold electron distribution at gold/iron oxide interface
Plasmon Dynamics in Colloidal Au<sub>2</sub>Cd AlloyâCdSe Core/Shell Nanocrystals
Metalâsemiconductor nanocrystal heterostructures are model systems for understanding the interplay between the localized surface plasmon resonances in the metal domain and the relaxation of the excited carriers in the semiconductor domain. Here we report the synthesis of colloidal Au<sub>2</sub>Cd (core)/CdSe (shell) nanocrystal heterostructures, which were characterized extensively with several structural and optical techniques, including time-resolved fluorescence and broad-band transient absorption spectroscopy (both below and above the CdSe band gap). The dynamics of the transient plasmon peak was dominated by the relaxation of hot carriers in the metal core, its spectral shape was independent of the pump wavelength, and the bleaching lifetime was about half a picosecond, comparable with the value found in the AuCd seeds used for the synthesis
Microscopic View on the Ultrafast Photoluminescence from Photoexcited Graphene
We present a joint theory-experiment
study on ultrafast photoluminescence from photoexcited graphene. On
the basis of a microscopic theory, we reveal two distinct mechanisms
behind the occurring photoluminescence: besides the well-known incoherent
contribution driven by nonequilibrium carrier occupations, we found
a coherent part that spectrally shifts with the excitation energy.
In our experiments, we demonstrate for the first time the predicted
appearance and spectral shift of the coherent photoluminescence
Microscopic View on the Ultrafast Photoluminescence from Photoexcited Graphene
We present a joint theory-experiment
study on ultrafast photoluminescence from photoexcited graphene. On
the basis of a microscopic theory, we reveal two distinct mechanisms
behind the occurring photoluminescence: besides the well-known incoherent
contribution driven by nonequilibrium carrier occupations, we found
a coherent part that spectrally shifts with the excitation energy.
In our experiments, we demonstrate for the first time the predicted
appearance and spectral shift of the coherent photoluminescence
Two-Photon-Induced Blue Shift of Core and Shell Optical Transitions in Colloidal CdSe/CdS Quasi-Type II Quantum Rods
The spectral dependence of the two-photon absorption in CdSe/CdS core/shell nanocrystal heterorods has been studied <i>via</i> two-photon-induced luminescence excitation spectroscopy. We verified that the two-photon absorption in these samples is a purely nonlinear phenomenon, excluding the contribution from multistep linear absorption mediated by defect states. A large absorption cross section was observed for CdSe/CdS core/shell quantum rods, in the range of 10<sup>5</sup> GM (1 GM = 10<sup>â50</sup> cm<sup>4</sup> s phot<sup>â1</sup>), scaling with the total nanocrystal volume and thus independent of the core emission wavelength. In the two-photon luminescence excitation spectra, peaks are strongly blue-shifted with respect to the one-photon absorption peaks, for both core and shell transitions. The experimental results are confirmed by <i>k·p</i> calculations, which attribute the shift to both different parity selection rules that apply to one-photon and two-photon transitions and a low oscillator strength for two-photon transitions close to the ground-state one-photon absorption. In contrast with lead chalcogenide quantum dots, we found no evidence of a breakdown of the optical selection rules, despite the presence of band anisotropy, <i>via</i> the anisotropic hole masses, and the explicitly induced reduction of the electron wave function symmetry <i>via</i> the rod shape of the shell. The anisotropy does lead to an unexpected splitting of the electron P<i></i>-states in the case of a large CdSe core encapsulated in a thin CdS shell. Hence, tuning of the core and shell dimensions and the concurrent transition from type I to quasi-type II carrier localization enables unprecedented control over the band-edge two-photon absorption