“…In the last few decades, nanostructured materials, such as fullerenes, nanotubes, nanoribbons, nanowires and nanocrystals (NCs), have attracted great attention due to their remarkable optical and electronic properties. In particular, semiconductor NCs, crystalline structures that can be confined in one, two or three spatial dimensions with length varying from 1 to 100 nm, 1,2 present special optical features related to the strong confinement effect of electrons, which occurs when the NC radius becomes smaller than the Bohr radius. 3,4 Materials that exhibit a system of electrons confined in all three spatial dimensions have quantized energy levels, such as atoms and molecules.…”