799 research outputs found
Effects of electron-phonon interactions on the electron tunneling spectrum of PbS quantum dots
We present a tunnel spectroscopy study of single PbS Quantum Dots (QDs) as
function of temperature and gate voltage. Three distinct signatures of strong
electron-phonon coupling are observed in the Electron Tunneling Spectrum (ETS)
of these QDs. In the shell-filling regime, the degeneracy of the
electronic levels is lifted by the Coulomb interactions and allows the
observation of phonon sub-bands that result from the emission of optical
phonons. At low bias, a gap is observed in the ETS that cannot be closed with
the gate voltage, which is a distinguishing feature of the Franck-Condon (FC)
blockade. From the data, a Huang-Rhys factor in the range is
obtained. Finally, in the shell tunneling regime, the optical phonons appear in
the inelastic ETS .Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Complex Networks on Hyperbolic Surfaces
We explore a novel method to generate and characterize complex networks by
means of their embedding on hyperbolic surfaces. Evolution through local
elementary moves allows the exploration of the ensemble of networks which share
common embeddings and consequently share similar hierarchical properties. This
method provides a new perspective to classify network-complexity both on local
and global scale. We demonstrate by means of several examples that there is a
strong relation between the network properties and the embedding surface.Comment: 8 Pages 3 Figure
Effect of short range order on electronic and magnetic properties of disordered Co based alloys
We here study electronic structure and magnetic properties of disordered CoPd
and CoPt alloys using Augmented Space Recursion technique coupled with the
tight-binding linearized muffin tin orbital (TB-LMTO) method. Effect of short
range ordering present in disordered phase of alloys on electronic and magnetic
properties has been discussed. We present results for magnetic moments, Curie
temperatures and electronic band energies with varying degrees of short range
order for different concentrations of Co and try to understand and compare the
magnetic properties and ordering phenomena in these systems.Comment: 15 pages,17 postscript figures,uses own style file
Autocorrelation analysis for the unbiased determination of power-law exponents in single-quantum-dot blinking
We present an unbiased and robust analysis method for power-law blinking
statistics in the photoluminescence of single nano-emitters, allowing us to
extract both the bright- and dark-state power-law exponents from the emitters'
intensity autocorrelation functions. As opposed to the widely-used threshold
method, our technique therefore does not require discriminating the emission
levels of bright and dark states in the experimental intensity timetraces. We
rely on the simultaneous recording of 450 emission timetraces of single
CdSe/CdS core/shell quantum dots at a frame rate of 250 Hz with single photon
sensitivity. Under these conditions, our approach can determine ON and OFF
power-law exponents with a precision of 3% from a comparison to numerical
simulations, even for shot-noise-dominated emission signals with an average
intensity below 1 photon per frame and per quantum dot. These capabilities pave
the way for the unbiased, threshold-free determination of blinking power-law
exponents at the micro-second timescale
Surface spin magnetism controls the polarized exciton emission from CdSe nanoplatelets
The surface of nominally diamagnetic colloidal CdSe nanoplatelets can
demonstrate paramagnetism owing to the uncompensated spins of dangling bonds
(DBSs). We reveal that by optical spectroscopy in high magnetic fields up to 15
Tesla using the exciton spin as probe of the surface magnetism. The strongly
nonlinear magnetic field dependence of the circular polarization of the exciton
emission is determined by the DBS and exciton spin polarization as well as by
the spin-dependent recombination of dark excitons. The sign of the exciton-DBS
exchange interaction can be adjusted by the nanoplatelet growth conditions
Electron and hole g-factors and spin dynamics of negatively charged excitons in CdSe/CdS colloidal nanoplatelets with thick shells
We address spin properties and spin dynamics of carriers and charged excitons
in CdSe/CdS colloidal nanoplatelets with thick shells. Magneto-optical studies
are performed by time-resolved and polarization-resolved photoluminescence,
spin-flip Raman scattering and picosecond pump-probe Faraday rotation in
magnetic fields up to 30 T. We show that at low temperatures the nanoplatelets
are negatively charged so that their photoluminescence is dominated by
radiative recombination of negatively charged excitons (trions). Electron
g-factor of 1.68 is measured and heavy-hole g-factor varying with increasing
magnetic field from -0.4 to -0.7 is evaluated. Hole g-factors for
two-dimensional structures are calculated for various hole confining potentials
for cubic- and wurtzite lattice in CdSe core. These calculations are extended
for various quantum dots and nanoplatelets based on II-VI semiconductors. We
developed a magneto-optical technique for the quantitative evaluation of the
nanoplatelets orientation in ensemble
Addressing the exciton fine structure in colloidal nanocrystals: the case of CdSe nanoplatelets
We study the band-edge exciton fine structure and in particular its
bright-dark splitting in colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals by four different
optical methods based on fluorescence line narrowing and time-resolved
measurements at various temperatures down to 2 K. We demonstrate that all these
methods provide consistent splitting values and discuss their advances and
limitations. Colloidal CdSe nanoplatelets with thicknesses of 3, 4 and 5
monolayers are chosen for experimental demonstrations. The bright-dark
splitting of excitons varies from 3.2 to 6.0 meV and is inversely proportional
to the nanoplatelet thickness. Good agreement between experimental and
theoretically calculated size dependence of the bright-dark exciton slitting is
achieved. The recombination rates of the bright and dark excitons and the
bright to dark relaxation rate are measured by time-resolved techniques
Tight-binding calculations of image charge effects in colloidal nanoscale platelets of CdSe
International audienceCdSe nanoplatelets show perfectly quantized thicknesses of few monolayers. They present a situation of extreme, yet well de ned quantum con nement. Due to large dielectric contrast between the semiconductor and its ligand environment, interaction between carriers and their dielectric images strongly renormalize bare single particle states. We discuss the electronic properties of this original system in an advanced tight-binding model, and show that Coulomb interactions, including self-energy corrections and enhanced electron-hole interaction, lead to exciton binding energies up to several hundred meVs
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