posted on 2017-09-12, 00:00authored byVigneshwaran Chandrasekaran, Mickaël
D. Tessier, Dorian Dupont, Pieter Geiregat, Zeger Hens, Edouard Brainis
Colloidal
core/shell InP/ZnSe quantum dots (QDs), recently produced
using an improved synthesis method, have a great potential in life-science
applications as well as in integrated quantum photonics and quantum
information processing as single-photon emitters. Single-particle
spectroscopy of 10 nm QDs with 3.2 nm cores reveals strong photon
antibunching attributed to fast (70 ps) Auger recombination of multiple
excitons. The QDs exhibit very good photostability under strong optical
excitation. We demonstrate that the antibunching is preserved when
the QDs are excited above the saturation intensity of the fundamental-exciton
transition. This result paves the way toward their usage as high-purity
on-demand single-photon emitters at room temperature. Unconventionally,
despite the strong Auger blockade mechanism, InP/ZnSe QDs also display
very little luminescence intermittency (“blinking”),
with a simple on/off blinking pattern. The analysis of single-particle
luminescence statistics places these InP/ZnSe QDs in the class of
nearly blinking-free QDs, with emission stability comparable to state-of-the-art
thick-shell and alloyed-interface CdSe/CdS, but with improved single-photon
purity.