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Spin Blockades to Relaxation of Hot Multiexcitons in Nanocrystals.

Tufan GhoshJoanna DehnelMarcel FabianEfrat LifshitzRoi BaerSanford Ruhman
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2019)
The conjecture that, as in bulk semiconductors, hot multiexcitons in nanocrystals cool rapidly to the lowest available energy levels is tested here by recording the effects of a single cold "spectator" exciton on the relaxation dynamics of a subsequently deposited hot counterpart. Results in CdSe/CdS nanodots show that a preexisting cold "spectator exciton" allows only half of the photoexcited electrons to relax directly to the band-edge. The rest are blocked in an excited quantum state due to conflicts in spin orientation. The latter fully relax in this sample only after ∼25 ps as the blocked electrons spins flip, prolonging the temporal window of opportunity for harvesting the retained energy more than 100 fold! Common to all quantum-confined nanocrystals, this process will delay cooling and impact the spectroscopic signatures of hot multiexcitons in all envisioned generation scenarios. How the spin-flipping rate scales with particle size and temperature remains to be determined.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • room temperature
  • single molecule
  • density functional theory
  • climate change
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular docking
  • transition metal
  • gene expression