The red and blue luminescence in silicon nanocrystals with an oxidized, nitrogen-containing shell

Authors
  • P. Galář
  • T. Popelář
  • J. Khun
  • I. Matulková
  • I. Němec
  • K.D. Newell ORCID logo
  • A. Michalcová
  • V. Scholtz
  • K. Kůsová
Publication date 01-06-2020
Journal Faraday Discussions
Volume | Issue number 222
Pages (from-to) 240-257
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP) - Van der Waals-Zeeman Institute (WZI)
Abstract
Traditionally, two classes of silicon nanocrystals (SiNCs) are recognized with respect to their light-emission properties. These are usually referred to as the “red” and the “blue” emitting SiNCs, based on the spectral region in which the larger part of their luminescence is concentrated. The origin of the “blue” luminescence is still disputed and is very probably different in different systems. One of the important contributions to the discussion about the origin of the “blue” luminescence was the finding that the exposure of SiNCs to even trace amounts of nitrogen in the presence of oxygen induces the “blue” emission, even in originally “red”-emitting SiNCs. Here, we obtained a different result. We show that the treatment of “red” emitting, already oxidized SiNCs in a water-based environment containing air-related radicals including nitrogen-containing species as well as oxygen, diminishes, rather than induces the “blue” luminescence.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary file
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1039/C9FD00092E
Permalink to this page
Back