107 research outputs found
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Optically pumped colloidal-quantum-dot lasing in LED-like devices with an integrated optical cavity.
Realization of electrically pumped lasing with solution processable materials will have a revolutionary impact on many disciplines including photonics, chemical sensing, and medical diagnostics. Due to readily tunable, size-controlled emission wavelengths, colloidal semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) are attractive materials for attaining this goal. Here we use specially engineered QDs to demonstrate devices that operate as both a light emitting diode (LED) and an optically pumped laser. These structures feature a distributed feedback resonator integrated into a bottom LED electrode. By carefully engineering a refractive-index profile across the device, we are able to obtain good confinement of a waveguided mode within the QD medium, which allows for demonstrating low-threshold lasing even with an ultrathin (about three QD monolayers) active layer. These devices also exhibit strong electroluminescence (EL) under electrical pumping. The conducted studies suggest that the demonstrated dual-function (lasing/EL) structures represent a promising device platform for realizing colloidal QD laser diodes
The effect of Auger heating on intraband carrier relaxation in semiconductor quantumrods
The rate at which excited charge carriers relax to their equilibrium state
affects many aspects of the performance of nanoscale devices, including
switching speed, carrier mobility and luminescent efficiency. Better
understanding of the processes that govern carrier relaxation therefore has
important technological implications. A significant increase in carrier-carrier
interactions caused by strong spatial confinement of electronic excitations in
semiconductor nanostructures leads to a considerable enhancement of Auger
effects, which can further result in unusual, Auger-process-controlled
recombination and energy-relaxation regimes. Here, we report the first
experimental observation of efficient Auger heating in CdSe quantum rods at
high pump intensities, leading to a strong reduction of carrier cooling rates.
In this regime, the carrier temperature is determined by the balance between
energy outflow through phonon emission and energy inflow because of Auger
heating. This equilibrium results in peculiar carrier cooling dynamics that
closely correlate with recombination dynamics, an effect never before seen in
bulk or nanoscale semiconductors.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Tunable magnetic exchange interactions in manganese-doped inverted core/shell ZnSe/CdSe nanocrystals
Magnetic doping of semiconductor nanostructures is actively pursued for
applications in magnetic memory and spin-based electronics. Central to these
efforts is a drive to control the interaction strength between carriers
(electrons and holes) and the embedded magnetic atoms. In this respect,
colloidal nanocrystal heterostructures provide great flexibility via
growth-controlled `engineering' of electron and hole wavefunctions within
individual nanocrystals. Here we demonstrate a widely tunable magnetic sp-d
exchange interaction between electron-hole excitations (excitons) and
paramagnetic manganese ions using `inverted' core-shell nanocrystals composed
of Mn-doped ZnSe cores overcoated with undoped shells of narrower-gap CdSe.
Magnetic circular dichroism studies reveal giant Zeeman spin splittings of the
band-edge exciton that, surprisingly, are tunable in both magnitude and sign.
Effective exciton g-factors are controllably tuned from -200 to +30 solely by
increasing the CdSe shell thickness, demonstrating that strong quantum
confinement and wavefunction engineering in heterostructured nanocrystal
materials can be utilized to manipulate carrier-Mn wavefunction overlap and the
sp-d exchange parameters themselves.Comment: To appear in Nature Materials; 18 pages, 4 figures + Supp. Inf
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