Nonclassical Mechanism of Metal-Enhanced Photoluminescence of Quantum Dots

Nano Lett. 2023 Sep 27;23(18):8524-8531. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c02250. Epub 2023 Sep 13.

Abstract

Metal-enhanced photoluminescence is able to provide a robust signal even from a single emitter and is promising in applications in biosensors and optoelectronic devices. However, its realization with semiconductor nanocrystals (e.g., quantum dots, QDs) is not always straightforward due to the hidden and not fully described interactions between plasmonic nanoparticles and an emitter. Here, we demonstrate nonclassical enhancement (i.e., not a conventional electromagnetic mechanism) of the QD photoluminescence at nonplasmonic conditions and correlate it with the charge exchange processes in the system, particularly with high efficiency of the hot-hole generation in gold nanoparticles and the possibility of their transfer to QDs. The hole injection returns a QD from a charged nonemitting state caused by hole trapping by surface and/or interfacial traps into an uncharged emitting state, which leads to an increased photoluminescence intensity. These results open new insights into metal-enhanced photoluminescence, showing the importance of the QD surface states in this process.

Keywords: hot carriers; hot-holes; metal-enhanced fluorescence; photoluminescence; plasmon; quantum dots.