Coherent phonons, polarons and Peierls distortion in bismuth-based nanocrystals

PRELEGENT: 
dr hab. Jacek Stolarczyk, prof. UJ
DataSeminarium: 
2024-05-27, 10:15
AfiliacjaPrelegenta: 
Zakład Fizyki Nanostruktur i Nanotechnologii, WFAIS UJ
AbstraktSeminarium: 

Applications of semiconductors in photocatalysis rely on efficient separation of the photoinduced charge carriers. An elegant way to achieve this without complicated device architectures is by using anisotropic nanocrystals capable of inherent charge carrier separation, without the need of an interface. Bismuth chalcohalides (BiAX, A = O, S, Se, Te; X = Cl, Br, I) are an emergent family of promising photocatalysts for hydrogen generation.

We show that the excitation of 3-15 nm thin BiOI nanoplatelets by a femtosecond laser pulse creates coherent phonons that cause a time-variant modulation of the optical density in a form of a damped temporal oscillation. This is consistent with the presence of a built-in dipolar electric field and its sub-picosecond screening by the photoexcited charge carriers. The detected phonon modes correspond exclusively to vibronic motion normal to the layers implying ultrafast charge separation between the oppositely charged layers.

We further demonstrate that the strong electron phonon-coupling results, once the initially coherent phonons dephase, in the self-trapping of the carriers within separate layers and the formation of polarons. This inhibits carrier recombination and provides them with the opportunity to reach the catalytically active sites and efficiently drive surface photocatalytic reactions. This shows that inherent anisotropy of BiOI is a critical factor for its photocatalytic activity.

Another member of the bismuth chalcohalide family, bismuth sulfoiodide, does not crystallize in the expected stoichiometric form BiSI, but instead as Bi13S18I2 nanorods. We show that this crystallographic structure is stabilized by Peierls distortion of a constituent column of Bi2+ cations along the main axis of the nanorod. This is a first demonstration of the effect, known in polyacetylene, in nanocrystals. The effect results one dimensional excitons and opens a bandgap in near infrared. This highlights the importance of spontaneous symmetry breaking phenomena in nanocrystals.