Plasmonic Properties of Silicon Nanocrystals Doped
with Boron and Phosphorus
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Abstract
Degenerately doped silicon nanocrystals
are appealing plasmonic materials due to silicon’s low cost
and low toxicity. While surface plasmonic resonances of boron-doped
and phosphorus-doped silicon nanocrystals were recently observed,
there currently is poor understanding of the effect of surface conditions
on their plasmonic behavior. Here, we demonstrate that phosphorus-doped
silicon nanocrystals exhibit a plasmon resonance immediately after
their synthesis but may lose their plasmonic response with oxidation.
In contrast, boron-doped nanocrystals initially do not exhibit plasmonic
response but become plasmonically active through postsynthesis oxidation
or annealing. We interpret these results in terms of substitutional
doping being the dominant doping mechanism for phosphorus-doped silicon
nanocrystals, with oxidation-induced defects trapping free electrons.
The behavior of boron-doped silicon nanocrystals is more consistent
with a strong contribution of surface doping. Importantly, boron-doped
silicon nanocrystals exhibit air-stable plasmonic behavior over periods
of more than a year