Stimulated blue emission in reconstituted films of ultrasmall silicon nanoparticles
Author(s) -
Munir H. Nayfeh,
Nicolas P. E. Barry,
Joel Therrien,
O. Akcakir,
Enrico Gratton,
G. Belomoin
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
applied physics letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.182
H-Index - 442
eISSN - 1077-3118
pISSN - 0003-6951
DOI - 10.1063/1.1347398
Subject(s) - materials science , quantum tunnelling , excited state , optoelectronics , silicon , nanoparticle , population inversion , photoluminescence , luminescence , quantum dot , molecular physics , nanotechnology , optics , laser , atomic physics , chemistry , physics
We dispersed electrochemical etched Si into a colloid of ultrabright blue luminescent nanoparticles (1 nm in diameter) and reconstituted it into films or microcrystallites. When the film is excited by a near-infrared two-photon process at 780 nm, the emission exhibits a sharp threshold near 106 W/cm2, rising by many orders of magnitude, beyond which a low power dependence sets in. Under some conditions, spontaneous recrystallization forms crystals of smooth shape from which we observe collimated beam emission, pointing to very large gain coefficients. The results are discussed in terms of population inversion, produced by quantum tunneling or/and thermal activation, and stimulated emission in the quantum confinement-engineered Si–Si phase found only on ultrasmall Si nanoparticles. The Si–Si phase model provides gain coefficients as large as 103–105 cm−1.
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