4.7 Article

Quantum Nature of THz Conductivity: Excitons, Charges, and Trions in 2D Semiconductor Nanoplatelets and Implications for THz Imaging and Solar Hydrogen Generation

Journal

ACS APPLIED NANO MATERIALS
Volume 5, Issue 6, Pages 8306-8313

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.2c01385

Keywords

photoinduced terahertz conductivity; CdSe nanoplatelets; mobility; exciton polarizability; trion mobility; THz detection

Funding

  1. DFG [AC290/2-2]

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This study investigates the THz conductivity of electrons, holes, excitons, and trions in two-dimensional semiconductor nanoparticles. The exciton polarizability is found to be related to intraexcitonic transitions and independent of the center-of-mass motion of an exciton. The thermal distribution among different states leads to a significant alteration of the resultant polarizability. A quantum mechanical model for trion mobility and a linear-response based formalism for exciton polarizability are developed. The results provide insights into the THz spectra of 2D semiconductors and offer a toolbox for the optimization of technological applications.
As for many technological applications, excitation transport determines their performance, we investigate the THz conductivity of electrons, holes, excitons, and trions in 2D semiconductor nanoparticles. While the non-Drude-like frequency response of charge carriers in these systems has been established recently, the responses of excitons and trions remain not fully understood. We show that the exciton polarizability is related to intraexcitonic transitions between different states of relative motion and independent of the center-of-mass motion of an exciton. In contrast to simplifying models, a thermal distribution among those states leads to a considerable alteration of the resultant polarizability. To understand experimental data, we develop a quantum mechanical model for the mobility of trions and describe a linear-response based formalism for the polarizability of excitons with a thermal distribution. Discussing the size-and aspect ratio dependent mobility of these species, we show that the particle manifold can be tuned. While for small nanoplatelets and a high number of background electrons signatures of negative trions dominate the THz response, in contrast, for extended 2D systems, excitons prevail. Like the conductance for charge carriers, the polarizability of excitons as well as mobility of trions is altered by quantization effects. Our results give basic insights to the understanding of the THz spectra of colloidal, epitaxial, and free-standing 2D semiconductors, for instance, monolayer perovskites and TMDCs, materials of current interest for solar energy harvesting, photocatalysis, or high bandwidth and low-noise nanoelectronics or THz detection in imaging systems for security applications. We provide a toolbox for the analysis of experiments and improved microscopic understanding, which in reverse allows optimization of technological applications.

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