We investigate the role of quantum confinement and photoluminescence (PL) lifetime of photoexcited charge carriers in semiconductor core/shell quantum dots (QDs) PL quenching due to surface modification. Surface modification is controlled by varying the number of dye molecules adsorbed onto the QD shell surface forming QD-dye nanoassemblies. We selected CuInS/ZnS (CIS) and InP/ZnS (InP) core/shell QDs exhibiting relatively weak (664 meV) and strong (1194 meV) confinement potentials for the conduction band electron.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
February 2022
Carbon nanoparticles (CNPs) are getting wide attention due to their fluorescence and low level of toxicity compared to other semiconducting photoluminescent materials. CNPs show strong 'solvatochromism', and the emission mechanism is still under discussion. Florescent carbon in the form of films would tremendously increase its potential for applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transport of charges lies at the heart of essentially all modern (opto-) electronic devices. Although inorganic semiconductors built the basis for current technologies, organic materials have become increasingly important in recent years. However, organic matter is often highly disordered, which directly impacts the charge carrier dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEfficient transport of excitation energy over long distances is a key process in light-harvesting systems, as well as in molecular electronics. However, in synthetic disordered organic materials, the exciton diffusion length is typically only around 10 nanometres (refs 4, 5), or about 50 nanometres in exceptional cases, a distance that is largely determined by the probability laws of incoherent exciton hopping. Only for highly ordered organic systems has the transport of excitation energy over macroscopic distances been reported--for example, for triplet excitons in anthracene single crystals at room temperature, as well as along single polydiacetylene chains embedded in their monomer crystalline matrix at cryogenic temperatures (at 10 kelvin, or -263 degrees Celsius).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor individual molecules from the newly synthesized calix[4]arene tethered perylene bisimide (PBI) trimer, we studied the emitted fluorescence intensity as a function of time. Owing to the zigzag arrangement of PBI dyes in these trimers, the polarization state of the emission provides directly information about the emitting subunit within the trimer. Interestingly, we observed emission from all neutral subunits within a trimer rather than exclusively from the subunit with the lowest site energy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe show experimentally that the photoluminescence intermittency (blinking) of single CdSe quantum dots (QDs) is influenced by the dielectric properties of the embedding environment (matrix), the type of ligands and the capping shell. For the on-times, we observe (and tentatively explain) a strong deviation from the commonly reported inverse power law behaviour, which can be taken into account by an exponential cut-off at long times. We assign this component to the photoejection of the electron, while the power law behaviour is a combination of hole- and electron-trapping processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe recorded fluorescence time traces, and simultaneously either the fluorescence lifetime or the emission spectra from single perylene bisimide (PBI) dimers embedded in a polystyrene matrix. In these traces three distinct intensity levels can be distinguished, which reflect the photo-induced radicalisation of one of the perylene subunits. Differences in the energy transfer rate between the neutral PBI and the reversibly formed radical anion give rise to variations in the chronological order of the appearance of the intensity levels, which allowed us to categorise the time traces into three distinct groups: Type 1 blinking corresponds to a high energy transfer rate, type 2 blinking to fluctuations between large and small transfer rates (dynamic quenching), and type 3 blinking results from small energy transfer rates together with Coulomb blockade.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotoinduced interfacial electron transfer (IET) in sulforhodamine B (SRhB)-aminosilane-Tin oxide (SnO(2)) nanoparticle donor-bridge-acceptor complexes has been studied on a single molecule and ensemble average level. On both SnO(2) and ZrO(2), the sum of single molecule fluorescence decays agree with the ensemble average results, suggesting complete sampling of molecules under single molecule conditions. Shorter fluorescence lifetime on SnO(2) than on ZrO(2) is observed and attributed to IET from SRhB to SnO(2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
August 2008
Electron transfer activity from excited single CdSe/ZnS core/shell quantum dots (QDs) to adsorbed Fluorescein 27 was studied by single QD fluorescence spectroscopy. In comparison with QDs, the QD-acceptor complexes showed a shorter average and broader distribution of QD emission lifetimes due to electron transfer to adsorbates. Large fluctuation of lifetimes in single QD/dye complexes was observed, indicating intermittent electron transfer activity from QDs.
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