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Surface-Originated Weak Confinement in Tetrahedral Indium Arsenide Quantum Dots.

Meeree KimJunho LeeJaegwan JungDaekwon ShinJugyoung KimEunhye ChoYaolong XingHyeonjun JeongSeongmin ParkSang Ho OhYong-Hyun KimSohee Jeong
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
While the shape-dependent quantum confinement (QC) effect in anisotropic semiconductor nanocrystals has been extensively studied, the QC in facet-specified polyhedral quantum dots (QDs) remains underexplored. Recently, tetrahedral nanocrystals have gained prominence in III-V nanocrystal synthesis. In our study, we successfully synthesized well-faceted tetrahedral InAs QDs with a first excitonic absorption extending up to 1700 nm. We observed an unconventional sizing curve, indicating weaker confinement than for equivalently volumed spherical QDs. The (111) surface states of InAs QDs persist at the conduction band minimum state even after ligand passivation with a significantly reduced band gap, which places tetrahedral QDs at lower energies in the sizing curve. Consequently, films composed of tetrahedral QDs demonstrate an extended photoresponse into the short-wave infrared region, compared to isovolume spherical QD films.
Keyphrases
  • quantum dots
  • room temperature
  • energy transfer
  • sensitive detection
  • multidrug resistant