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Optical and Magneto-Optical Properties of Donor-Bound Excitons in Vacancy-Engineered Colloidal Nanocrystals
Author(s) -
Francesco Carulli,
Valerio Pinchetti,
Matteo L. Zaffalon,
Andrea Camellini,
Silvia Rotta Loria,
Fabrizio Moro,
M. Fanciulli,
M. ZavelaniRossi,
Francesco Meinardi,
S. A. Crooker,
Sergio Brovelli
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c01818
Subject(s) - exciton , photoluminescence , nanocrystal , trion , luminescence , spin states , electron , materials science , band gap , vacancy defect , chalcogenide , semiconductor , quenching (fluorescence) , chemistry , chemical physics , optoelectronics , molecular physics , condensed matter physics , nanotechnology , fluorescence , crystallography , physics , inorganic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Controlled insertion of electronic states within the band gap of semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) is a powerful tool for tuning their physical properties. One compelling example is II-VI NCs incorporating heterovalent coinage metals in which hole capture produces acceptor-bound excitons. To date, the opposite donor-bound exciton scheme has not been realized because of the unavailability of suitable donor dopants. Here, we produce a model system for donor-bound excitons in CdSeS NCs engineered with sulfur vacancies ( V S ) that introduce a donor state below the conduction band (CB), resulting in long-lived intragap luminescence. V S -localized electrons are almost unaffected by trapping, and suppression of thermal quenching boosts the emission efficiency to 85%. Magneto-optical measurements indicate that the V S are not magnetically coupled to the NC bands and that the polarization properties are determined by the spin of the valence-band photohole, whose spin flip is massively slowed down due to suppressed exchange interaction with the donor-localized electron.

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