Blue Light Emitting Defective Nanocrystals Composed of Earth-Abundant Elements.
Eric C HansenYun LiuHendrik UtzatSophie N BertramJeffrey C GrossmanMoungi G BawendiPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Copper-based ternary (I-III-VI) chalcogenide nanocrystals (NCs) are compositionally-flexible semiconductors that do not contain lead (Pb) or cadmium (Cd). Cu-In-S NCs are the dominantly studied member of this important materials class and have been reported to contain optically-active defect states. However, there are minimal reports of In-free compositions that exhibit efficient photoluminescence (PL). Here, we report a novel solution-phase synthesis of ≈4 nm defective nanocrystals (DNCs) composed of copper, aluminum, zinc, and sulfur with ≈20 % quantum yield and an attractive PL maximum of 450 nm. Extensive spectroscopic characterization suggests the presence of highly localized electronic states resulting in reasonably fast PL decays (≈1 ns), large vibrational energy spacing, small Stokes shift, and temperature-independent PL linewidth and PL lifetime (between room temperature and ≈5 K). Furthermore, density functional theory (DFT) calculations suggest PL transitions arise from defects within a CuAl5 S8 crystal lattice, which supports the experimental observation of highly-localized states. The results reported here provide a new material with unique optoelectronic characteristics that is an important analog to well-explored Cu-In-S NCs.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- room temperature
- light emitting
- molecular dynamics
- energy transfer
- ionic liquid
- oxide nanoparticles
- heavy metals
- molecular docking
- photodynamic therapy
- quantum dots
- solid state
- molecular dynamics simulations
- aqueous solution
- metal organic framework
- nk cells
- reduced graphene oxide
- dengue virus
- risk assessment
- raman spectroscopy