Competitive Effects of Oxidation and Quantum Confinement on Modulation of the Photophysical Properties of Metallic-Phase Tungsten Dichalcogenide Quantum Dots

Metallic-phase transition metal dichalcogenide quantum dots (TMDs- QDs) have been reported in recent years. However, a dominant mechanism for modulating their intrinsic exciton behaviors has not been determined yet as their size is close to the Bohr radius. Herein, we demonstrate that the oxidation...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inNanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) Vol. 13; no. 14; p. 2075
Main Authors Kim, Bo-Hyun, Yang, Jun Yong, Park, Kwang Hyun, Lee, DongJu, Song, Sung Ho
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 15.07.2023
MDPI
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Metallic-phase transition metal dichalcogenide quantum dots (TMDs- QDs) have been reported in recent years. However, a dominant mechanism for modulating their intrinsic exciton behaviors has not been determined yet as their size is close to the Bohr radius. Herein, we demonstrate that the oxidation effect prevails over quantum confinement on metallic-phase tungsten dichalcogenide QDs (WX - QDs; X = S, Se) when the QD size becomes larger than the exciton Bohr radius. WX - QDs with a diameter of ~12 nm show an obvious change in their photophysical properties when the pH of the solution changes from 2 to 11 compared to changing the size from ~3 nm. Meanwhile, we found that quantum confinement is the dominant function for the optical spectroscopic results in the WX - QDs with a size of ~3 nm. This is because the oxidation of the larger WX - QDs induces sub-energy states, thus enabling excitons to migrate into the lower defect energy states, whereas in WX - QDs with a size comparable to the exciton Bohr radius, protonation enhances the quantum confinement.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
These authors contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:2079-4991
2079-4991
DOI:10.3390/nano13142075