Efficient Band-Edge Emission from Indirect Bandgap Semiconductor Quantum Dots upon Shell Engineering

Nano Lett. 2023 Apr 26;23(8):3239-3244. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c00008. Epub 2023 Apr 6.

Abstract

Environmentally friendly colloidal quantum dots (QDs) of groups III-V are in high demand for next-generation high-performance light-emitting devices for display and lighting, yet many of them (e.g., GaP) suffer from inefficient band-edge emission due to the indirect bandgap nature of their parent materials. Herein, we theoretically demonstrate that efficient band-edge emission can be activated at a critical tensile strain γc enabled by the capping shell when forming a core/shell architecture. Before γc is reached, the emission edge is dominated by dense low-intensity exciton states with a vanishing oscillator strength and a long radiative lifetime. After γc is crossed, the emission edge is dominated by high-intensity bright exciton states with a large oscillator strength and a radiative lifetime that is shorter by a few orders of magnitude. This work provides a novel strategy for realizing efficient band-edge emission of indirect semiconductor QDs via shell engineering, which is potentially implemented employing the well-established colloidal QD synthesis technique.

Keywords: density functional theory; exciton; quantum dot; time-dependent density functional theory.