Infrared Absorption and Hot Electron Production in Low-Electron-Density Nanospheres: A Look at Real Systems
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2017

Doped semiconductor quantum dots are a new class of plasmonic systems exhibiting infrared resonances. At ultralow concentrations of charge carriers that can be achieved by controlled doping, only few carriers occupy each quantum dot; therefore, a spectrum with well-defined atomic-like peaks is expected. Here we investigate theoretically how surface imperfections and inhomogeneities in shape and morphology (surface "roughness") always present in these nanocrystals, randomize their energy levels, and blur the atomic-like features. We assume a Gaussian distribution of each energy level and use their standard deviation sigma as a measure of the nanocrystals' roughness. For nearly perfect nanospheres with small roughness (sigma), the spectrum exhibits well-defined peaks. However, increasing roughness effectively randomizes the energy level distribution, and when approaches 15% of the nanoparticle's Fermi energy, any trace of an atomic-like structure is lost in the spectrum, and a continuous yet few-conduction-electron localized surface plasmon resonance emerges.

Författare

R. C. Monreal

Universidad Autonoma de Madrid (UAM)

Peter Apell

Chalmers, Fysik, Kondenserade materiens teori

Tomasz Antosiewicz

Chalmers, Fysik, Bionanofotonik

Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

1948-7185 (eISSN)

Vol. 8 2 524-530

Ämneskategorier

Fysik

DOI

10.1021/acs.jpclett.6b02953

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Senast uppdaterat

2023-07-20