"Intact" Carrier Doping by Pump-Pump-Probe Spectroscopy in Combination with Interfacial Charge Transfer: A Case Study of CsPbBr3 Nanocrystals

J Phys Chem Lett. 2018 Jun 21;9(12):3372-3377. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.8b01132. Epub 2018 Jun 7.

Abstract

Carrier doping is important for semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) as it offers a new knob to tune NCs' functionalities, in addition to size and shape control. Also, extensive studies on NC devices have revealed that under operating conditions NCs are often unintentionally doped with electrons or holes. Thus, it is essential to be able to control the doping of NCs and study the carrier dynamics of doped NCs. The extension of previously reported redox-doping methods to chemically sensitive materials, such as recently introduced perovskite NCs, has remained challenging. We introduce an "intact" carrier-doping method by performing pump-pump-probe transient absorption spectroscopy on NC-acceptor complexes. The first pump pulse is used to trigger charge transfer from the NC to the acceptor, leading to NCs doped with a band edge carrier; the following pump-probe pulses measure the dynamics of carrier-doped NCs. We performed this measurement on CsPbBr3 NCs and deduced positive and negative trion lifetimes of 220 ± 50 and 150 ± 40 ps, respectively, for 10 nm diameter NCs, both dominated by Auger recombination. It also allowed us to identify randomly photocharged excitons in CsPbBr3 NCs as positive trions.