2007 APS March Meeting
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session B39: Focus Session: Materials and Applications for Solar Energy I
11:15 AM–2:03 PM,
Monday, March 5, 2007
Colorado Convention Center
Room: 502
Sponsoring
Units:
FIAP DMP
Chair: Mike McGehee, Stanford University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.B39.5
Abstract: B39.00005 : Seven Excitons per Single Photon Using Semiconductor Nanocrystals
12:27 PM–1:03 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Victor Klimov
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
The efficient conversion of photon energy into electrical charges
is a
central goal of much research in physics, chemistry, and biology.
A usual
assumption is that absorption of a single photon by a material
produces a
single electron-hole pair (exciton), while the photon energy in
excess of
the energy gap is dissipated as heat. In 2004, we reported for
the first
time that nanocrystals (NCs) of PbSe could respond to absorption
of a single
photon by producing two or more excitons with the unity
probability (Phys.
Rev. Lett. 92, 186601, 2004). Our more recent findings indicate
that this
carrier multiplication process can generate multiple charges with
quantum
efficiencies that correspond to the ultimate limit dictated by
energy
conservation. For example, for photon energy of 7.8 energy gaps,
a maximal
possible number of photogenerated excitons based on energy
considerations is
7, which is exactly the number measured in our experiments (Nano
Lett. 6,
424, 2006). Another unexpected feature of carrier multiplication
is that it
results in unusual distributions of carrier populations that
cannot be
described by Poisson statistics. Specifically, by selecting
certain photon
energies, we obtain photoexcited NC ensembles with nearly pure
single
multiplicities (i.e., all excited NCs contain the same number of
excitons)
that can be tuned in the controlled way from 1 to 7 (Phys. Rev.
Lett. 96,
097402, 2006). While the exact mechanism for carrier
multiplication in NCs
is still under debate, one factor, which likely contributes to high
efficiencies of this process, is a unique property of the NCs to
produce
significant carrier-carrier interactions as indicated, e.g., by
our previous
Auger recombination studies (Science 287, 1011, 2000). This
confinement-enhanced Coulomb coupling can lead to the unusual
mechanism for
direct photogeneration of multiexcitons via virtual
single-exciton states,
which can explain our observations of very short, sub-200
femtosecond
buildup times of multiexciton populations in the regime of carrier
multiplication (Nature Phys. 1, 189, 2005).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.B39.5