6533b861fe1ef96bd12c4f4d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Light-induced nonthermal population of optical phonons in nanocrystals
Bruno P. FalcãoMaria R. CorreiaM.r. SoaresJoaquim P. LeitãoRui N. PereiraRui N. PereiraAndrés CantareroHartmut Wiggerssubject
010302 applied physicseducation.field_of_studyMaterials sciencePhononPopulation02 engineering and technologyPhysik (inkl. Astronomie)021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesMolecular physicsSpectral lineNanomaterialssymbols.namesakeElectrical resistivity and conductivityExcited state0103 physical sciencessymbols0210 nano-technologyeducationRaman spectroscopyExcitationdescription
Raman spectroscopy is widely used to study bulk and nanomaterials, where information is frequently obtained from spectral line positions and intensities. In this study, we monitored the Raman spectrum of ensembles of semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) as a function of optical excitation intensity (optical excitation experiments). We observe that in NCs the red-shift of the Raman peak position with increasing light power density is much steeper than that recorded for the corresponding bulk material. The increase in optical excitation intensity results also in an increasingly higher temperature of the NCs as obtained with Raman thermometry through the commonly used Stokes/anti-Stokes intensity ratio. More significantly, the obtained dependence of the Raman peak position on temperature in optical excitation experiments is markedly different from that observed when the same NCs are excited only thermally (thermal excitation experiments). This difference is not observed for the control bulk material. The inefficient diffusion of photogenerated charges in nanoparticulate systems, due to their inherently low electrical conductivity, results in a higher steady-state density of photoexcited charges and, consequently, also in a stronger excitation of optical phonons that cannot decay quickly enough into acoustic phonons. This results in a nonthermal population of optical phonons and thus the Raman spectrum deviates from that expected for the temperature of the system. Our study has major consequences to the general application of Raman spectroscopy to nanomaterials.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-03-30 |