Rapid hot-carrier/exciton cooling constitutes a major loss channel for photovoltaic efficiency. How to decelerate the hot-carrier/exciton relaxation remains a crux for achieving high-performance photovoltaic devices. Here, we demonstrate slow hot-exciton cooling that can be extended to hundreds of picoseconds in colloidal HgTe quantum dots (QDs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProducing heterostructures of cesium lead halide perovskites and metal-chalcogenides in the form of colloidal nanocrystals can improve their optical features and stability, and also govern the recombination of charge carriers. Herein, the synthesis of red-emitting CsPbI/ZnSe nanoheterostructures is reported via an in situ hot injection method, which provides the crystallization conditions for both components, subsequently leading to heteroepitaxial growth. Steady-state absorption and photoluminescence studies alongside X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy analysis evidence on a type-I band alignment for CsPbI/ZnSe nanoheterostructures, which exhibit photoluminescence quantum yield of 96% due to the effective passivation of surface defects, and an enhancement in carrier lifetime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA large volume, scalable synthesis procedure of HgTe quantum dots (QDs) capped initially with short-chain conductive ligands ensures ligand exchange-free and simple device fabrication. An effective n- or p-type self-doping of HgTe QDs is achieved by varying cation-anion ratio, as well as shifting the Fermi level position by introducing single- or double-cyclic thiol ligands, that is, 2-furanmethanethiol (FMT) or 2,5-dimercapto-3,4-thiadiasole (DMTD) in the synthesis. This allows for preserving the intact surface of the HgTe QDs, thus ensuring a one order of magnitude reduced surface trap density compared with HgTe subjected to solid-state ligand exchange.
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