Examining the Effect of Dopant Ionic Radius on Plasmonic M:ZnO Nanocrystals (M = Al3+, Ga3+, In3+)

May 24, 2021

Title

Examining the Effect of Dopant Ionic Radius on Plasmonic M:ZnO Nanocrystals (M = Al3+, Ga3+, In3+)

Author

Conti Carl R., McBride James R., Strouse Geoffrey F

Year

2021

Abstract

Understanding the role of dopant deactivation on plasmon frequency and extinction is important for the rational design of plasmonic semiconductor nanocrystals (PSNCs). Aliovalent dopants do not always contribute a free carrier to a localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) for many reasons, including the existence of a depletion region, the pinning of carriers at neutral defect sites, or even the formation of a secondary insulating microphase (inclusions) not observable in the powder X-ray diffraction (pXRD). Here, we investigate such possibilities and their role in determining the LSPR frequency of Al-, Ga-, and In-doped ZnO NCs. Elemental analysis, pXRD, and absorption measurements are utilized to examine the impact of dopant incorporation on the resulting properties. Both simple and advanced effective mass Drude models are used to fit the mid-infrared plasmons, while one-electron oxidant chemical titrations are used as an independent measure of the free electron concentrations. The results of these analyses indicate that dopant/host lattice mismatch leads to inefficient carrier generation for aliovalent substitution, potentially due to local spinel-like inclusions. Smaller dopant ions are more likely to incorporate interstitially and form spinel phases, which results in an increased number of pinned carriers. Improved size matching from Al3+ to In3+ results in increased substitution efficiency and subsequently higher free carrier concentrations and LSPR frequencies. Drude model correction factors are calculated for each sample and compared to the literature value for n-ZnO determined via full band structure calculations. Each dopant is shown to have a unique correction factor, further illustrating the effect of differing ionic radii on the resulting LSPR.

Instrument

FTIR-6800

Keywords

FTIR spectroscopy, plasmonics, nanocrystals