Synthesis and Spectroscopy of Silver-Doped PbSe Quantum Dots.
Daniel M KroupaBarbara K HughesElisa M MillerDavid T MooreNicholas C AndersonBoris D ChernomordikArthur J NozikMatthew C BeardPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
Electronic impurity doping of bulk semiconductors is an essential component of semiconductor science and technology. Yet there are only a handful of studies demonstrating control of electronic impurities in semiconductor nanocrystals. Here, we studied electronic impurity doping of colloidal PbSe quantum dots (QDs) using a postsynthetic cation exchange reaction in which Pb is exchanged for Ag. We found that varying the concentration of dopants exposed to the as-synthesized PbSe QDs controls the extent of exchange. The electronic impurity doped QDs exhibit the fundamental spectroscopic signatures associated with injecting a free charge carrier into a QD under equilibrium conditions, including a bleach of the first exciton transition and the appearance of a quantum-confined, low-energy intraband absorption feature. Photoelectron spectroscopy confirms that Ag acts as a p-type dopant for PbSe QDs and infrared spectroscopy is consistent with k·p calculations of the size-dependent intraband transition energy. We find that to bleach the first exciton transition by an average of 1 carrier per QD requires that approximately 10% of the Pb be replaced by Ag. We hypothesize that the majority of incorporated Ag remains at the QD surface and does not interact with the core electronic states of the QD. Instead, the excess Ag at the surface promotes the incorporation of <1% Ag into the QD core where it causes p-type doping behavior.
Keyphrases
- quantum dots
- energy transfer
- sensitive detection
- molecular dynamics
- room temperature
- highly efficient
- visible light
- heavy metals
- high resolution
- machine learning
- gold nanoparticles
- molecular dynamics simulations
- public health
- molecular docking
- deep learning
- dna methylation
- density functional theory
- risk assessment
- gene expression
- silver nanoparticles
- mass spectrometry