AI Article Synopsis

  • Pump-probe experiments indicate that electron injection at the dye-TiO2 interface occurs at extremely high rates (over 1 x 10(13) s(-1)), but there is still significant residual dye emission lasting into the long nanosecond range.
  • Time-correlated single photon counting microscopy reveals that dye-sensitized mesoporous TiO2 films have intense residual emissions with long decay times (up to 220 ns), mainly due to trapped physisorbed dye, which diffuses before being quenched.
  • In contrast, individual anatase nanoparticles that have undergone dialysis show much lower emission intensities and shorter lifetimes, suggesting that some dye molecules attached to surface defects do not inject electrons as rapidly as those

Article Abstract

As it has been shown by pump-probe experiments electron injection at the interface between a dye molecule and mesoporous TiO2 proceeds with rates exceeding 1 x 10(13) s(-1). However, similar dye-TiO2 systems exhibit residual dye emission with lifetimes extending into the long nanosecond range. To address this inhomogeneity of injection rates time-correlated single photon counting microscopy was used to compare the emission behavior of dye-sensitized mesoporous films of TiO2 with that of individual anatase nanoparticles that had undergone extensive dialysis. The sensitized films produce intense residual emission with multiexponential decay components as long as 220 ns. The channels of mesoporous films contain physisorbed and trapped dye, which is the dominant source of the emission. It is likely that the wide range of lifetimes reflects the distribution of mean free paths experienced by the loose dye molecules diffusing within the film prior to undergoing oxidative quenching. In contrast, the intensity of emission from individual nanoparticles from which the loose dye was removed by dialysis is orders of magnitude lower. The lifetimes obtained from such particles are much shorter, with the primary component on a sub-nanosecond time scale. The presence of residual emission with a 230 ps lifetime shows that even on the surfaces of dialyzed nanoparticles there is a fraction of sensitizer molecules that do not inject electrons with the same high rate as is observed in ultrafast pump-probe experiments on films. Since the physisorbed dye was removed from these samples by dialysis, the residual emission is likely to originate from dye molecules bound to surface defects. Unusual collective emission bursts were observed in some of the measurements on sensitized nanoparticles. We attribute this behavior to stimulated emission from individual nanocrystallites.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp064005fDOI Listing

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