4.7 Article

Effects of Zn2+ and Ga3+ doping on the quantum yield of cluster-derived InP quantum dots

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 151, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.5126971

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) through the UW Molecular Engineering Materials Center (MEMC), a Materials Research Science and Engineering Center [DMR-1719797]
  2. Washington Research Foundation postdoctoral fellowship
  3. National Science Foundation [CHE-1552164, NNCI-1542101]
  4. University of Washington
  5. Molecular Engineering and Sciences Institute
  6. Clean Energy Institute
  7. Merck Group/EMD Performance Materials

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As the commercial display market grows, the demand for low-toxicity, highly emissive, and size-tunable semiconducting nanoparticles has increased. Indium phosphide quantum dots represent a promising solution to these challenges; unfortunately, they typically suffer from low inherent emissivity resulting from charge carrier trapping. Strategies to improve the emissive characteristics of indium phosphide often involve zinc incorporation into or onto the core itself and the fabrication of core/shell heterostructures. InP clusters are high fidelity platforms for studying processes such as cation exchange and surface doping with exogenous ions since these clusters are used as single-source precursors for quantum dot synthesis. Here, we examined the incorporation of zinc and gallium ions in InP clusters and the use of the resultant doped clusters as single-source precursors to emissive heterostructured nanoparticles. Zinc ions were observed to readily react with InP clusters, resulting in partial cation exchange, whereas gallium resisted cluster incorporation. Zinc-doped clusters effectively converted to emissive nanoparticles, with quantum yields strongly correlated with zinc content. On the other hand, gallium-doped clusters failed to demonstrate improvements in quantum dot emission. These results indicate stark differences in the mechanisms associated with aliovalent and isovalent doping and provide insight into the use of doped clusters to make emissive quantum dots. Published under license by AIP Publishing.

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