Quantum Ensembles of Silicon Nanoparticles: Discrimination of Static and Dynamic Photoluminescence Quenching Processes

J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces. 2019 Jul 25;123(29):17976-17986. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.9b04334. Epub 2019 Jul 1.

Abstract

Porous silicon photoluminescence is characterized by a broad emission band that displays unusually long (tens to hundreds of micro-seconds), wavelength-dependent emissive lifetimes. The photoluminescence is associated with quantum confinement of excitons in silicon nanocrystallites contained within the porous matrix, and the broad emission spectrum derives from the wide distribution of nanocrystallite sizes in the material. The longer emissive lifetimes in the ensemble of quantum-confined emitters correspond to the larger nanocrystallites, with their longer wavelengths of emission. The quenching of this photoluminescence by aromatic, redox-active molecules aminochrome (AMC), dopamine, adrenochrome, sodium anthraquinone-2-sulfonate, benzyl viologen dichloride, methyl viologen dichloride hydrate, and ethyl viologen dibromide is studied, and dynamic and static quenching mechanisms are distinguished by the emission lifetime analysis. Because of the dependence of the emission lifetime on emission wavelength from the silicon nanocrystallite ensemble, a pronounced blue shift is observed in the steady-state emission spectrum upon exposure to dynamic-type quenchers. Conversely, static-type quenching systems show uniform quenching across all emission wavelengths. Thus, the difference between static and dynamic quenching mechanisms is readily distinguished by ratiometric photoluminescence spectroscopy. The application of this concept to imaging of AMC, the oxidized form of the neurotransmitter dopamine that is of interest for its role in neurodegenerative diseases, is demonstrated. It is found that static electron acceptors result in no ratiometric contrast, while AMC shows a strong contrast, allowing ready visualization in a 2-D imaging experiment.