4.8 Article

Colloidal-Quantum-Dot Ring Lasers with Active Color Control

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages 1028-1034

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b04495

Keywords

Quantum-dot lasers; core/shell nanocrystals; giant-shell nanocrystals; colloidal quantum dots; template stripping; ultrafast switching

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) [680-50-1513, 680-50-1509]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation under the Ambizione Program
  3. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Program (FP)/ERC Grant [339905]

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To improve the photophysical performance of colloidal quantum dots for laser applications, sophisticated core/shell geometries have been developed. Typically, a wider bandgap semiconductor is added as a shell to enhance the gain from the quantum-dot core. This shell is designed to electronically isolate the core, funnel excitons to it, and reduce nonradiative Auger recombination. However, the shell could also potentially provide a secondary source of gain, leading to further versatility in these materials. Here we develop high-quality quantum-dot ring lasers that not only exhibit lasing from both the core and the shell but also the ability to switch between them. We fabricate ring resonators (with quality factors up to similar to 2500) consisting only of CdSe/CdS/ZnS core/shell/shell quantum dots using a simple template-stripping process. We then examine lasing as a function of the optical excitation power and ring radius. In resonators with quality factors >1000, excitons in the CdSe cores lead to red lasing with thresholds at similar to 25 mu J/cm(2). With increasing power, green lasing from the CdS shell emerges (>100 mu J/cm(2)) and then the red lasing begins to disappear (>250 mu J/cm(2)). We present a rate-equation model that can explain this color switching as a competition between exciton localization into the core and stimulated emission from excitons in the shell. Moreover, by lowering the quality factor of the cavity we can engineer the device to exhibit only green lasing. The mechanism demonstrated here provides a potential route toward color-switchable quantum-dot lasers.

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