4.7 Article

Two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy of CdSe nanoparticles at very low pulse power

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 138, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4772465

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF MRSEC [DMR 08-02054]
  2. The Keck Foundation
  3. AFOSR [FA9550-09-1-0117]
  4. DTRA [HDTRA1-10-1-0091 P00002]
  5. Division Of Materials Research
  6. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [820054] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Nanoparticles have been proposed as a promising material for creating devices that harvest, transport, and manipulate energy and electrons. Ultrafast charge carrier dynamics represent a critical design aspect and are dependent on both size and shape of the nanoparticle. Spectroscopic investigation of the electronic structure and dynamics of these systems is complicated by sample inhomogeneity, which broadens peaks and leads to ambiguity in interpretation of both spectra and dynamics. Here, we use two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy to remove inhomogeneous broadening and to clarify interpretation of measured dynamics. We specifically investigate the effect of nanoparticle shape on the electronic structure and ultrafast electronic dynamics in the band-edge exciton states of CdSe quantum dots, nanorods, and nanoplatelets. Particle size was chosen to enable straightforward comparisons of the effects of particle shape on the spectra and dynamics without retuning the laser source. The spectra were measured with low pulse powers (generally <1 nJ/pulse), using short pulses (similar to 12 fs) to minimize interference from solvent contributions to the spectra, ambiguities in the dynamics due to pulse-overlap effects, and contributions to the dynamics from multi-exciton effects. The lowest two exciton states are clearly resolved in spectra of quantum dots but unresolved for nanorods and nanoplates, in agreement with previous spectroscopic and theoretical results. In all nanoparticles, ultrafast dynamics measurements show strong evidence of electronic relaxation into the lowest energy exciton state within similar to 30 fs, a timescale not observable in previous dynamics measurements of similar systems. These dynamics are unambiguously assigned to hole relaxation, as the higher lying electronic excited states are not energetically accessible in these experiments. Clear evidence of coherent superpositions of the lowest two exciton states were not seen in any of the particles studied, in contrast to recent results from work on quantum dots. (C) 2013 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4772465]

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