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Introductory lecture: origins and applications of efficient visible photoluminescence from silicon-based nanostructures

Leigh T. Canham
- 24 Jun 2020 - 
- Vol. 222, pp 10-81
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TLDR
A variety of silicon-based nanostructures with dimensions in the 1-5 nm range now emit tunable photoluminescence (PL) spanning the visible range, and a number of other proposed uses of ultra-efficient PL from "nano-Si" could become viable in cosmetics, catalysis, security and forensics.
Abstract
A variety of silicon-based nanostructures with dimensions in the 1–5 nm range now emit tunable photoluminescence (PL) spanning the visible range. Achievement of high photoluminescence quantum efficiency (PLQY) relies critically on their surface chemistry passivation and an impressive “tool box” of options have been developed. Two distinct PL bands are dominant. The “S-Band” (red–green emission with Slow microsecond decay) has PLQY that has steadily improved from ∼3% in 1990 to 65 ± 5% by 2017. The “F-Band” (blue–yellow with Fast nanosecond decay) has reported PLQY values that have improved from ∼0.1% in 1994 to as high as ∼90% by 2016. The vast literature on both bands is surveyed and for the S-band, size-structure-PL correlations and selective photo-excitation studies are highlighted. Resonant photoexcitation and single quantum dot studies have revealed the key role of quantum confinement and the excitonic phonon-assisted nature of the radiative transitions. For the F-band, in contrast, specific phenomenological studies are highlighted that demonstrate similar emission without the presence of silicon nanostructures. Low PLQY F-band emission from pure silicon–silica core shell systems is probably associated with oxide-related defects, but ultrahigh PLQY from many lower temperature synthesis routes is likely to be from carbon-based nanostructures or chromophores, not silicon nanostructures. Potential applications for both PL bands include sensing, medical imaging, theranostics, photovoltaics, LED colour converters and nano-thermometry. Emerging “green” synthesis routes are mentioned. If scalability and cost are significantly improved then a number of other proposed uses of ultra-efficient PL from “nano-Si” could become viable in cosmetics, catalysis, security and forensics.

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References
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TL;DR: The photoluminescence (PL) of silicon quantum dots present in porous silicon can be tuned from the near infrared to the ultraviolet when the surface is passivated with Si-H bonds as discussed by the authors.
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Near-infrared fluorophores for biomedical imaging

TL;DR: This Review covers recent progress on near-infrared fluorescence imaging for preclinical animal studies and clinical diagnostics and interventions.
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