The emissive properties of thiol-capped CdSe nanocrystals (NCs) with intrinsic dual emission are investigated through temperature-dependent photoluminescence (PL) measurements. We demonstrate the influence of thiols on the relative PL intensities of the core and surface emissive states, as well as on the observed Stokes shifts. A redshift of both the core and surface PL in comparison with phosphonate-capped NCs is consistent with recent work exploring the effect of thiols as excitonic hole-delocalizing ligands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere are several contradictory accounts of the changes to the emissive behavior of semiconductor nanocrystal upon a ligand exchange from trioctylphosphine/cadmium-phosphonates passivation to N-butylamine. This communication explains the contradictory accounts of this reaction using new insights into ligand chemistry. Also, a previously unknown link between surface emission and cadmium-phosphonate (Z-type) ligands is shown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSemiconductor nanocrystals have been synthesized that support intrinsic dual emission from the excitonic core as well as the surface. By virtue of chemical control of the thermodynamics of the core/surface equilibria, these nanocrystals support ratiometric temperature sensing over a broad temperature scale. This surface-chemistry-based approach for creating intrinsic dual emission enables a completely new strategy for application of these nanocrystals in optical nanothermometry.
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