4.6 Article

Theory of Plasmonic Hot-Carrier Generation and Relaxation

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 125, Issue 41, Pages 9201-9208

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.1c05837

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LANL Directed Research and Development Funds (LDRD)
  2. National Nuclear Security Administration of U.S. Department of Energy [89233218CNA000001]
  3. LANL Institutional Computing (IC) Program

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The study developed a quantum-mechanical model and coupled master equation method to investigate the mechanisms of plasmonic hot-carrier generation, relaxation, and trapping. Numerical simulations on Jellium nanoparticles revealed that electron-electron scattering and electron-phonon scattering dominate different time scales in the relaxation dynamics. The theory applies to any other atomistic models beyond the demonstration with the Jellium model.
Hot-carrier (HC) generation from (localized) surface plasmon decay has recently attracted much attention due to its promising applications in physical, chemical, materials, and energy science. However, the detailed mechanisms of plasmonic HC generation, relaxation, and trapping are less studied. In this work, we developed and applied a quantum-mechanical model and coupled master equation method to study the generation of HCs from plasmon decay and their following relaxation processes with different mechanisms treated on equal footing. First, a quantum-mechanical model for HC generation is developed. Its connection to existing semiclassical models and time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) is discussed. Second, the relaxation and lifetimes of HCs are investigated in the presence of electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions. A GW-like approximation is introduced to account for the electron-electron scattering. The numerical simulations on the Jellium nanoparticles with a size up to 1.6 nm demonstrate the electron-electron scattering and electron-phonon scattering dominate different time scale in the relaxation dynamics. We also generalize the model to study the extraction of HCs to attached molecules. The quantum yield of extracting HCs for other applications is found to be size-dependent. In general, the smaller size of NP improves the quantum yield, which is in agreement with recent experimental measurements. Even though we demonstrate this newly developed theoretical formalism with Jellium model, the theory applies to any other atomistic models.

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