Correlative optical and scanning probe microscopy of silicon quantum dots
| Authors | |
|---|---|
| Supervisors | |
| Cosupervisors | |
| Award date | 21-01-2021 |
| ISBN |
|
| Number of pages | 189 |
| Organisations |
|
| Abstract |
In this work, we tackle some of the interesting and unresolved questions of the microscopic origin of emission from silicon quantum dots (Si-QDs). In particular, our interest is mainly in Si-QDs that exhibit a fast radiative rate, which is interesting for the applications in lighting and photovoltaics, suggesting a high oscillator strength. This is in literature mostly reported from the organically capped Si-QDs, which are the central material of this thesis. In chapter 2 we critically assess a main synthesis route for organically capped Si-QDs, arguing that there is an important need to separate the contribution of Si-QD emission from that of carbon quantum dots that may also be formed. In chapter 3 and 4 we address the dependence of quantum dot emission on ligand choice, examining the dependence of emission on pH, and examining physics of the transition dipole moment through a study of photoluminescence polarization anisotropy. Finally, to better understand the size-effect in such QDs, we assembled a correlative system that allows us to perform a single dot optical microscopy and atomic force microscopy (AFM) for a single QD at the same time (or in a fast sequence). We demonstrate its importance for analysis of emission origin in Si-QDs in Chapter 5, while leveraging it to study a new type of mesoscopic quantum dot assemblies in Chapter 6. These assemblies may have applications as countermeasure against counterfeiting.
|
| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Language | English |
| Downloads | |
| Permalink to this page | |
