Sergii
Morozov
a,
Stefano
Vezzoli
b,
Alina
Myslovska
c,
Alessio
Di Giacomo
c,
N. Asger
Mortensen
ad,
Iwan
Moreels
c and
Riccardo
Sapienza
*b
aCenter for Nano Optics, University of Southern Denmark, Campusvej 55, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark
bThe Blackett Laboratory, Department of Physics, Imperial College London, London SW7 2BW, UK. E-mail: r.sapienza@imperial.ac.uk
cDepartment of Chemistry, Ghent University, Krijgslaan 281-S3, Gent 9000, Belgium
dDanish Institute for Advanced Study, University of Southern Denmark, Campusvej 55, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark
First published on 4th January 2023
Giant shell CdSe/CdS quantum dots are bright and flexible emitters, with near-unity quantum yield and suppressed blinking, but their single photon purity is reduced by efficient multiexcitonic emission. We report the observation, at the single dot level, of a large blueshift of the photoluminescence biexciton spectrum (24 ± 5 nm over a sample of 32 dots) for pure-phase wurtzite quantum dots. By spectral filtering, we demonstrate a 2.3 times reduction of the biexciton quantum yield relative to the exciton emission, while preserving as much as 60% of the exciton single photon emission, thus improving the purity from g2(0) = 0.07 ± 0.01 to g2(0) = 0.03 ± 0.01. At a larger pump fluency, spectral purification is even more effective with up to a 6.6 times reduction in g2(0), which is due to the suppression of higher order excitons and shell states experiencing even larger blueshifts. Our results indicate the potential for the synthesis of engineered giant shell quantum dots, with further increased biexciton blueshifts, for quantum optical applications requiring both high purity and brightness.
In contrast to cryogenic quantum dots – where the neutral excitonic emission can be easily spectrally filtered4 – colloidal quantum dots, at room temperature, have a broad excitonic emission spectrum which overlaps with multiexcitonic bands. Efficient Auger recombination ensures single photon emission in colloidal quantum dots, by suppressing many-body emission; however, it also leads to the excitation of charged and trapped states, often associated with photoluminescence blinking and reduced brightness.5 Giant shell nanocrystals can significantly reduce Auger recombination and protect excitons from surface interactions, therefore reducing blinking and increasing the quantum yield.6,7 However, this implies that stable, neutral multiexcitons can efficiently recombine, leading to a reduced emission purity, and a typical intensity auto-correlation function of g2(0) > 0.3 at zero delay.8,9
The simplest strategy to reduce multiexciton contributions in colloidal dots is to set the pump fluency well below saturation.10 This, however, limits drastically the quantum dots’ brightness11 and their ability to produce single photons on demand. Alternatively, temporal, polarization and spectral filtering can improve the purity. In temporal filtering, photons with a fast decay time can be removed after time-tagging their arrival time, with g2(0) as low as 0.005 at room temperature.12 However, the temporal filtering is based on post-processing, which is not suitable for all applications.13 Polarization and spectral filtering of unwanted multiexciton contributions is so far restricted to cryogenically operated quantum emitters, because of broadened emission lines and polarization decoherence at room temperature.14 In order to make spectral filtering effective at room temperature, biexciton separation of the order of the exciton bandwidth is required.
In recent years giant shell CdSe/CdS dot-in-rod and rod-in-rod nanocrystals, which are pure-phase wurtzite core/shell nanocrystals, have shown evidence of a large biexciton blueshift,15,16 exceeding the blueshifts in commonly studied zinc blende/wurtzite quantum dots.17 Calculations of the electronic band structure have revealed that in pure-phase wurtzite nanocrystals with a thick CdS shell, the strain at the CdSe/CdS interface yields a strong piezo-electric field across the CdSe nanocrystal core,15,18 and in turn an enhanced electron–hole wavefunction separation and a large blueshift of the biexciton emission.
Here we study pure-phase wurtzite CdSe/CdS giant shell quantum dots, synthesized with oleic acid so that the shell grows symmetrically in all directions, and we characterize their optical properties at the single dot level. We report an average exciton quantum yield of 50 ± 5% and a lifetime of 638 ± 356 ns over a sample of 32 dots. More importantly, we observe a large biexciton blueshift of 24 ± 5 nm, which is of the same order of the exciton spectral width (40 ± 5 nm). We exploit this large shift to spectrally filter the single photon emission and show a 2.3 times reduction of the biexciton quantum yield relative to the exciton emission, which improves the single photon purity from g2(0) = 0.07 ± 0.01 to g2(0) = 0.03 ± 0.01. We also show that spectral filtering becomes more effective at a larger pump fluency, just above the exciton saturation, with up to a 6.6 times purity improvement. An average sample of 16 quantum dots – pumped just above saturation and filtered above 650 nm – is shown to undergo a four-fold reduction in g2(0) (0.34 to 0.08) with only a 1.85 reduction in brightness (50 ± 5% to 27 ± 3%). This shows the potential of spectral filtering to strongly reduce the contribution of multiexcitons and parasitic shell states, while preserving most of the exciton emission.
The radiative relaxation of generated excitonic and multiexcitonic states at room temperature results in photoluminescence emission centered at around 650 nm with an average full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) of 40 nm (see ESI Fig. S1† for the emission statistics over 32 quantum dots and Fig. S2† for photo-stability analysis). The measured neutral exciton emission lifetime extends to hundreds of ns (638 ± 356 ns, see the ESI† for more details), in line with previous observations on pure-phase wurtzite giant shell quantum dots,19,20 surpassing by almost an order of magnitude that of previously reported zinc blende/wurtzite giant shell quantum dots.7,9 This difference is mainly due to the additional buildup of a piezo-electric field across the CdSe core, which localizes the electron and hole wave-functions at the opposite surfaces of the quantum dot core and thus leads to a significant reduction of the electron–hole overlap.18
The photoluminescence spectrum shows blueshifted emission at a high excitation power, see the inset in Fig. 1b for a representative quantum dot, which is mainly due to the contribution of efficient biexciton emission.7,9 Single exciton emission dominates the spectrum of an individual quantum dot at a very low pump fluency (〈N〉 ≪ 1, pink line), while the spectrum at a high pump fluency has a blueshifted shoulder (〈N〉 ≫ 1, blue line). Fig. 1b shows agreement with a two-Gaussian fit at a high fluency, with the orange curve being the exciton (X) contribution and the blue one being the biexciton (XX); the relative weight of the two spectra (i.e. their total area) is fixed by auto-correlation measurements in order to improve the accuracy of the fit (see ESI Fig. S3† for details). We attribute the biexciton spectral blueshift to the enhancement of repulsive interactions among multiple electrons in the conduction band and among holes in the valence band, brought about by the localization of electrons and holes at the opposite surfaces of the core due the strong piezo-electric field.15,16 The spectral shoulder further to the blue, at around 570 nm, is evidence of higher order multiexciton emission and parasitic shell emission.8,17 We characterize the magnitude of the biexciton blueshift by extracting the difference between the maxima of the blue-filled and orange-filled peaks obtained by fitting the spectra of 32 individual quantum dots. The resulting statistics is summarized in Fig. 1c and shows a distribution with an average value and a standard deviation of 24 ± 5 nm (78 ± 15 meV). Fig. 1d presents the simulations of expected losses for a single exciton introduced by the spectral filtering. For the sake of simplicity, we perform a simulation of how much of the single exciton emission one needs to sacrifice to filter 50% of the biexciton emission as a function of their spectral separation in a given batch of quantum dots. Here we used typical emission parameters of quantum dots: Gaussian spectral profiles for an X emission maximum at 660 nm with a FWHM of X and XX emission of 40 nm. The obtained results in Fig. 1d demonstrate the minimal (<12%) single exciton losses already for only 20 nm X–XX separation.
The ability of a quantum dot to generate only one photon at a time degrades at a high pump fluency, 〈N〉 > 1, due to the progressive contribution of biexciton and other multiexciton recombination leading to multi-photon emission. We here note that the number of generated electron–hole pairs N follows a Poissonian distribution with an average 〈N〉 proportional to the excitation power, so biexcitons can be generated even well below the saturation regime. In the example of Fig. 2, g2(0) increases from a minimum of 0.07 for 〈N〉 = 0.15 to a value of 0.22 for 〈N〉 = 1.23. We also note in Fig. 2c a strong contribution from a very fast decay process (cyan peaks), which we interpret as emission from spurious shell states. Such states are also typically blueshifted and exhibit classical emission properties, i.e. g2(0) = 1,17 which further deteriorates the purity of the quantum dot emission. Although the total number of photons emitted by the shell – as measured by the area of the cyan peaks – is negligible compared to the core emission, their very short lifetime (∼1 ns) means that they contribute significantly to the measured g2(0).
The intensity correlation histograms g2(τ) can be used to precisely estimate the relative efficiency of the biexciton emission. Indeed, it has been shown in ref. 21 that in the limit of low pump excitation, 〈N〉 → 0, the purity becomes g2(0) → ηXX/ηX. Here, ηXX and ηX are the luminescence quantum yields of the biexciton and single exciton, respectively. The latter yield ηX can be estimated by the photoluminescence spectrally integrated counts, taking into account the setup collection and detection efficiency and by dividing the result by the pump repetition rate. We note that g2(0) is roughly constant at low power because the area of the zero-delay peak and the area of the side peaks both grow quadratically with 〈N〉 until intensity saturation is reached, as we demonstrate in Fig. 2c for QD16. This is clear proof that biexciton emission dominates the photon purity at a low pump fluency;9 the same analysis applied to different dots shows the same quadratic behavior (see ESI Fig. S4†). However, as pumping approaches the exciton saturation, i.e. 〈N〉 ⪆ 1 (red-shaded area in Fig. 2c), contributions of higher order multiexciton and shell emission are no longer negligible, hence the relative weights of peaks evolve in a complex manner. We note that the single photon purity at a high pump fluency does not represent directly the multiexciton contribution due to the significant contributions of the CdS shell states with g2(0) = 1 (see ESI Fig. S5a†).
As shown in Fig. 2d, the maximum brightness of the single exciton emission X0 is reached around 〈N〉 ≈ 3, approaching a quantum yield ηX of nearly 1 in this case (1 Mcounts per s for 1 MHz excitation). Although at a high pump fluency intensity blinking decreases the time-averaged brightness, due to the contribution of charged exciton states, the emission brightness remains around 50% across the ensemble of dots studied (Fig. S4†). The conversion between the pump power and the average number of excitons generated 〈N〉 is done a posteriori for each individual dot,9,22 by fitting the evolution of photoluminescence with the pump fluency (red line in panel Fig. 2d, in excellent agreement with the data).
We repeat the filtering experiment in a wide range of pump fluencies below and above saturation, as shown in Fig. 3c. At a low fluency, we can observe a 2.3 times suppression of the biexciton relative to the exciton emission, with purity improving from g2(0) = 0.07 ± 0.01 to g2(0) = 0.03 ± 0.01 (after background correction,23,24 see ESI Fig. S6†). This is consistent with the biexciton blueshift in this quantum dot (20 nm, see ESI Fig. S3†) and the exciton bandwidth (33 nm). The effect of spectral filtering on g2(0) is even larger at a higher pump fluency, with a factor of 6.6 observed for 〈N〉 = 4.9. Generally, the filtered g2(0) dependency is much flatter (green triangles in Fig. 3c), as opposed to the sharp rise observed above saturation for the unfiltered case (black stars in Fig. 3c), demonstrating an efficient suppression of higher order multiexcitons and shell state emission, in addition to the biexciton.
We now turn to discuss the effect of filtering on photoluminescence brightness and the trade-off between purity and brightness. Evidently, spectral filtering reduces the total photoluminescence count rate. In the case of QD16 with an emission maximum at around 642 nm, the long-pass filter at 650 nm removes about 71% of photoluminescence intensity, severely compromising the brightness of the source. As the emission wavelength changes substantially from dot to dot, some dots achieve a better balance between brightness and purity for a fixed filter cut-off of 650 nm. This is illustrated in Fig. 3d, which shows a distribution of unfiltered time-averaged intensity-g2(0) data pairs for 16 quantum dots (black stars), and their corresponding filtered data (green triangles). Data are acquired for a pump fluency above saturation, 2 < 〈N〉 < 5. All measurements are done at the same laser pump power, but due to the variability of absorption, 〈N〉 changes from dot to dot. The photoluminescence brightness is given in Mcounts per s; since the pump rate is 1 MHz, this is a direct measure of the average photon rate obtainable, i.e. 0.5 = 50% quantum yield (collection efficiency, losses and detection are all taken into account for according to ref. 25, see the ESI†). On average, the brightness goes from 0.50 ± 0.05 Mcounts per s to 0.27 ± 0.03 Mcounts per s after filtering, whereas the purity improves from g2(0) = 0.34 ± 05 to g2(0) = 0.08 ± 01 (see more examples in ESI Fig. S6†). Besides the gain in single photon purity, the spectral filtering can improve the photo-stability of emission as spurious states are removed from the signal. However, it may also introduce additional fluctuations of the bright excitonic state due to an inappropriate choice of filtering wavelength in combination with spectral diffusion at room temperature (see ESI Fig. S2 and S8b†). This analysis clearly shows the need to search for an optimal cut-off wavelength for spectral filtering, which can balance single photon purification with tolerable losses and photo-stability.
Long exciton lifetime reported for this class of quantum dots could be considered a limitation to the maximum achievable brightness. However, recent studies on similar dots have highlighted that lifetimes can be reduced by working with highly charged excitons, while maintaining low blinking and large quantum yields.20 Moreover, coupling with plasmonic and dielectric nanoantennas could also be used to reduce the radiative lifetime and improve brightness, without affecting the spectral positions of bi- and multiexcitons.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Details on the synthesis of giant shell quantum dots; photoluminescence measurements; fitting intensity correlation histograms; emission statistics of individual quantum dots; photoluminescence spectra of QD16 and QD02 at a high pump fluency; evolution of the central and side peaks in the intensity correlation histogram with pump fluency; emission of QD16 at increasing pump fluency; background emission at increasing excitation power; other examples of scanning a quantum dot spectrum with a tunable long-pass filter, and of filtering with a long pass filter at 650 nm. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2nr04744f |
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