Electron - acoustic phonon coupling in colloidal lead sulfide quantum dots
ORAL
Abstract
Lead chalcogenide quantum dots (QDs) with bandgaps in the shortwave infrared are candidate materials for next generation photovoltaics exceeding the Shockley-Queisser limit. Despite ongoing controversy, multiple exciton generation (MEG) in QDs offers potential for improved photovoltaic efficiency. Hot carriers from high energy photoexcitation dissipate excess energy via coupled phonons; this is detrimental to MEG. The electron-phonon coupling (EPC) magnitude, partitioning among modes and dependence on the size/shape are poorly understood. We performed degenerate femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy to investigate Auger recombination dynamics, a reverse process of MEG. We observe a quantum beat due to coherent acoustic phonons in femtosecond pump-probe signals from oleate capped colloidal lead sulfide QDs in toluene. A 3.4 ps period oscillation decays with 4.6 ps damping constant in 8 nm diameter dots; the amplitude increases linearly with pump energy and modulation is weaker than reported in smaller dots. An elastic continuum model for acoustic phonon frequency vs. dot diameter suggests a not yet understood quantitative discrepancy with prior work. These relaxation processes have important implications for QD photovoltaics.
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Authors
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Byungmoon Cho
University of Colorado Boulder, Univ of Colorado - Boulder
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Vivek Tiwari
Univ of Colorado - Boulder
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Austin Spencer
Univ of Colorado - Boulder
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Dmitry Baranov
University of Colorado Boulder, Univ of Colorado - Boulder
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Samuel Park
University of Colorado Boulder, Univ of Colorado - Boulder
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David Jonas
University of Colorado Boulder, Univ of Colorado - Boulder