posted on 2016-02-04, 16:29authored byBenjamin
E. Treml, Alan G. Jacobs, Robert T. Bell, Michael O. Thompson, Tobias Hanrath
Much
of the promise of nanomaterials derives from their size-dependent,
and hence tunable, properties. Impressive advances have been made
in the synthesis of nanoscale building blocks with precisely tailored
size, shape and composition. Significant attention is now turning
toward creating thin film structures in which size-dependent properties
can be spatially programmed with high fidelity. Nonequilibrium processing
techniques present exciting opportunities to create nanostructured
thin films with unprecedented spatial control over their optical and
electronic properties. Here, we demonstrate single scan laser spike
annealing (ssLSA) on CdSe nanocrystal (NC) thin films as an experimental
test bed to illustrate how the size-dependent photoluminescence (PL)
emission can be tuned throughout the visible range and in spatially
defined profiles during a single annealing step. Through control of
the annealing temperature and time, we discovered that NC fusion is
a kinetically limited process with a constant activation energy in
over 2 orders of magnitude of NC growth rate. To underscore the broader
technological implications of this work, we demonstrate the scalability
of LSA to process large area NC films with periodically modulated
PL emission, resulting in tunable emission properties of a large area
film. New insights into the processing-structure–property relationships
presented here offer significant advances in our fundamental understanding
of kinetics of nanomaterials as well as technological implications
for the production of nanomaterial films.