In papers published recently in the journals Nature Physics and Applied
Physics Letters, the scientists demonstrate that carrier multiplication is
not unique to lead selenide nanocrystals, but also occurs with very high
efficiency in nanocrystals of other compositions, such as cadmium selenide.
In addition, these new results shed light on the mechanism for carrier
multiplication, which likely occurs via the instantaneous photoexcitation
of multiple electrons. Such a process has never been observed in
macroscopic materials and it explicitly relies on the unique physics of
the nanoscale size regime.
According to Richard Schaller, a Los Alamos scientist on the team, “Our
research of carrier multiplication in previous years was really focused on
analyzing the response of lead selenide nanocrystals to very short laser
pulses. We discovered that the absorption of a single photon could produce
two or even three excited electrons. We knew, somewhat instinctively, that
carrier multiplication was probably not confined to lead selenide, but we
needed to pursue the question.”
Lead project scientist Victor Klimov explains, “Carrier multiplication
actually relies upon very strong interactions between electrons squeezed
within the tiny volume of a nanoscale semiconductor particle. That is why
it is the particle size, not its composition that mostly determines the
efficiency of the effect. In nanosize crystals, strong electron-electron
interactions make a high-energy electron unstable. This electron only
exists in its so-called 'virtual state’ for an instant before rapidly
transforming into a more stable state comprising two or more electrons.”
The Los Alamos findings point toward practical photovoltaic
technologies that may utilize such traditional solar cell materials as
cadmium telluride, which is very similar to cadmium selenide. Other
interesting opportunities may also be associated with the use of carrier
multiplication in solar-fuel technologies and specifically, the production
of hydrogen by photo-catalytic water splitting. The latter process
requires four electrons per water molecule and its efficiency can be
dramatically enhanced if these multiple electrons can be produced via a
single-photon absorption event.
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Los Alamos National Laboratory

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