Mercury Chalcogenide Nanoplatelet–Quantum Dot
Heterostructures as a New Class of Continuously Tunable Bright Shortwave
Infrared Emitters
Posted on 2020-04-21 - 14:41
Despite broad applications
in imaging, energy conversion, and telecommunications,
few nanoscale moieties emit light efficiently in the shortwave infrared
(SWIR, 1000–2000 nm or 1.24–0.62 eV). We report quantum-confined
mercury chalcogenide (HgX, where X = Se or Te) nanoplatelets (NPLs)
can be induced to emit bright (QY > 30%) and tunable (900–1500+
nm) infrared emission from attached quantum dot (QD) “defect”
states. We demonstrate near unity energy transfer from NPL to these
QDs, which completely quench NPL emission and emit with a high QY
through the SWIR. This QD defect emission is kinetically tunable,
enabling controlled midgap emission from NPLs. Spectrally resolved
photoluminescence demonstrates energy-dependent lifetimes, with radiative
rates 10–20 times faster than those of their PbX analogues
in the same spectral window. Coupled with their high quantum yield,
midgap emission HgX dots on HgX NPLs provide a potential platform
for novel optoelectronics in the SWIR.
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Tenney, Stephanie
M.; Vilchez, Victoria; Sonnleitner, Mikayla L.; Huang, Chengye; Friedman, Hannah C.; Shin, Ashley J.; et al. (2020). Mercury Chalcogenide Nanoplatelet–Quantum Dot
Heterostructures as a New Class of Continuously Tunable Bright Shortwave
Infrared Emitters. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c00958