4.8 Article

Photoemission Mechanism of Water-Soluble Silver Nanoclusters: Ligand-to-Metal-Metal Charge Transfer vs Strong Coupling between Surface Plasmon and Emitters

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 136, Issue 5, Pages 1686-1689

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja407911b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [21003050, 61008003, 21373004, 20925310]
  2. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai [10ZR1410500, 08DZ2273300, 11QA1402100, 10PJ1403200]
  3. Ph.D. Programs Foundation of the Ministry of Education of China [20100076120019]
  4. Shanghai Municipal Education Commission and Shanghai Education Development Foundation [12ZZ037, 11CG24]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
  6. JoRRIS project

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Using carboxylate-protected silver nanoclusters (Ag-carboxylate NCs) as a model, we separately investigated the contribution of the ligand shell and the metal core to understand the nature of photoluminescence of Ag NCs. A new Ag(0)NCs@Ag(I)-carboxylate complex core shell structural model has been proposed. The emission from the Ag-carboxylate NCs could be attributed to ligand-to-metal metal charge transfer from Ag(I)carboxylate complexes (the oxygen atom in the carboxylate ligands to the Ag(1) ions) to the Ag atoms and subsequent radiative relaxation. Additionally, we found that the emission wavelength of the Ag NCs depends on the excitation wavelength implying a strong coupling between surface plasmon and emitter in Ag NCs. The strong coupling between the surface plasmon and the emitter determines the quantum yield and lifetime. The emission mechanism of Ag NCs and its relation to the organic templates and metal cores were clearly clarified. The results should stimulate additional experimental and theoretical research on the molecular-level design of luminescent metal probes for optoelectronics and other applications.

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