4.7 Article

Mechanisms of fluorescence blinking in semiconductor nanocrystal quantum dots

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 123, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.1993567

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The light-induced spectral diffusion and fluorescence intermittency (blinking) of semiconductor nanocrystal quantum dots are investigated theoretically using a diffusion-controlled electron-transfer (DCET) model, where a light-induced one-dimensional diffusion process in energy space is considered. Unlike the conventional electron-transfer reactions with simple exponential kinetics, the model naturally leads to a power-law statistics for the intermittency. We formulate a possible explanation for the spectral broadening and its proportionality to the light energy density, the -3/2 power law for the blinking statistics of the fluorescence intermittency, the breakdown of the power-law behavior with a bending tail for the light periods, a lack of bending tail for the dark periods (but would eventually appear at later times), and the dependence of the bending tail on light intensity and temperature. This DCET model predicts a critical time t(c) (a function of the electronic coupling strength and other quantities), such that for times shorter than t(c) the exponent for the power law is -1/2 instead of -3/2. Quantitative analyses are made of the experimental data on spectral diffusion and on the asymmetric blinking statistics for the on and off events. Causes for deviation of the exponent from the ideal value of -3/2 are also discussed. Several fundamental properties are determined from the present experimental data, the diffusion correlation time, the Stokes shift, and a combination of other molecular-based quantities. Specific experiments are suggested to test the model further, extract other molecular properties, and elucidate more details of the light-induced charge-transfer dynamics in quantum dots. (C) 2005 American Institute of Physics.

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