Nearly monodisperse zinc-blende CdSe/CdS core/shell nanocrystals were synthesized by epitaxial growth of 1-6 monolayers of CdS shell onto presynthesized zinc-blende CdSe core nanocrystals in one pot. To retain the zinc-blende structure, the reaction temperature was lowered to the 100-140 °C range by using cadmium diethyldithiocarbamate as a single-source precursor and primary amine as activation reagents for the precursor. Although the wurtzite counterparts grown under the same conditions showed optical properties similar to those reported in the literature, zinc-blende CdSe/CdS core/shell nanocrystals demonstrated surprisingly different optical properties, with ensemble single-exponential photoluminescence decay, significant decrease of photoluminescence peak width by the shell growth, and comparatively high photoluminescence quantum yields. The lifetime for the single-exponential ensemble photoluminescence decay of zinc-blende CdSe/CdS core/shell nanocrystals with 3-4 monolayers of CdS shell was reproducibly found to be approximately 16.5 ± 1.0 ns.
Solution processability of nanocrystals coated with a stable monolayer of organic ligands (nanocrystal-ligands complexes) is the starting point for their applications, which is commonly measured by their solubility in media. A model described in the other report (10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b00737) reveals that instead of offering steric barrier between inorganic cores, it is the rotation/bending entropy of the C-C σ bonds within typical organic ligands that exponentially enhances solubility of the complexes in solution. Dramatic ligand chain-length effects on the solubility of CdSe-n-alkanoates complexes shall further reveal the power of the model. Subsequently, "entropic ligands" are introduced to maximize the intramolecular entropic effects, which increases solubility of various nanocrystals by 10(2)-10(6). Entropic ligands can further offer means to greatly improve performance of nanocrystals-based electronic and optoelectronic devices.
This work explored possibilities to obtain colloidal quantum dots (QDs) with ideal photoluminescence (PL) properties, i.e., monoexponential PL decay dynamics, unity PL quantum yield, ensemble PL spectrum identical to that at the single-dot level, single-dot PL nonblinking, and antibleaching. Using CdSe/CdS core/shell QDs as the model system, shell-epitaxy, ligand exchange, and shape conversion of the core/shell QDs were studied systematically to establish a strategy for reproducibly synthesizing QDs with the targeted properties. The key synthetic parameter during epitaxy was application of entropic ligands, i.e., mixed carboxylate ligands with different hydrocarbon chain length and/or structure. Well-controlled epitaxial shells with certain thickness (∼3-8 monolayers of the CdS shells) were found to be necessary to reach ideal photoluminescence properties, and the size of the core QDs was found to play a critical role in determining both photophysical and photochemical properties of the core/shell QDs. Effects of shape of the core QDs were unnoticeable, and shape of the core/shell QDs only affected photophysical properties quantitatively. Surface ligands, amines versus carboxylates, were important for photochemical properties (antiblinking and antibleaching) but barely affected photophysical properties as long as entropic ligands (mixed carboxylate ligands with distinguishable hydrocarbon chain lengths) were applied during epitaxy. Chemical environment (in polymer or in air), coupled with surface ligands, determined photochemical properties of the core/shell QDs with a given core size and shell thickness.
Here we report the first series of phase-pure zinc-blende CdSe/CdS core/shell quantum dots (QDs) with reproducibly controlled shell thickness (4-16 monolayers), which are nonblinking (≥95% 'on' time) in single-exciton regime for the entire series. These unique QDs possess well-controlled yet simple excited-state decay dynamics at both single-dot and ensemble levels, extremely small nonblinking volume threshold, if any, and unique 'on' and 'off' probability statistics. The outstanding optical properties of the QDs at the single-dot level were found to be correlated well with their ensemble properties. These small and bright nonblinking QDs offer promising technical application prospect in both single-dot and ensemble levels. The consistent and reproducible experimental results shed new light on the mechanisms of blinking of QDs.
Mn2+-doped ZnSe nanocrystals (Mn:ZnSe d-dots) with high optical qualityhigh dopant emission quantum yield with monoexponential dopant-emission decay dynamicsenable systematic and quantitative studies of temperature- and Mn2+ concentration-dependent optical properties of the dopant emission, especially its relationship with magnetic coupling. While temperature-dependent steady-state and transient dopant emission of d-dots with dilute Mn2+ concentrations originated from isolated Mn2+ ions, and can be quantitatively treated as a result of exciton–phonon coupling of isolated paramagnetic emission centers. Dopant emission of d-dots with high Mn2+ concentrations (up to 50% of Zn2+ ions being replaced by Mn2+ ions in the core nanocrystals) are found solely related to magnetically coupled Mn2+ emission. Magnetic coupling effects on steady-state dopant emission of d-dots with high Mn2+ concentrations are much stronger than those observed for doped bulk semiconductors, which is found to follow a strong and universe shell-thickness dependence for the epitaxial ZnSe and/or ZnS shells of the d-dots. By exciting the magnetically coupled Mn2+ ions directly, dopant-emission of d-dots with high Mn2+ concentrations exhibit monoexponential decay dynamics. In addition to this emission channel, a minor channel with slightly longer decay lifetime appears when the host nanocrystals with high Mn2+ concentrations are excited, which is barely visible at room temperature and increases its fraction by decreasing temperature.
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