Visible luminescence mechanism of ZnO nanoparticles synthesized by sol-gel method
Autor: | X L Chen, Y H Ning, Yuefeng Liu, Yang Liu, S L Liang, C S Xu, H T Xu, H Q Qiao |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
Materials science
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena Biomedical Engineering Analytical chemistry Bioengineering Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics General Chemistry Electron Condensed Matter Physics medicine.disease_cause Acceptor Nanocrystalline material medicine Particle General Materials Science Emission spectrum Luminescence Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics Ultraviolet |
Zdroj: | Journal of nanoscience and nanotechnology. 11(11) |
ISSN: | 1533-4880 |
Popis: | We presented our investigations on the absorption and emission properties of the nanocrystalline ZnO particles of different particle sizes (2 nm-5 nm) by sol-gel method. In the room temperature PL spectra, three emission bands, ultraviolet (UV), blue and green were observed. With increasing the particle sizes, both the UV and the visible emission bands shifted to lower energies progressively. From the size-dependency, there was a linear relationship between the energetic maxima of the UV and the green emission bands with a slope of about 0.26, which indicated that the green luminescence of ZnO was produced by the transitions of electrons from deep level to the valence band (or shallow acceptor level). A linear dependence was also found between the energetic maxima of the UV and the blue emissions with a slope of 0.15, the origin this blue emission band is not clear at present. While in van Dijken et al.'s paper, however, they identified only two emission bands in the emission spectra, an UV and a broad visible emission band, and the linear fit between the energetic maxima of these two bands in particles of different sizes has a slope of 0.6, so they proposed that the visible emission in ZnO was originated from the recombination of a shallowly trapped electron with a deeply trapped hole. We attributed this divergence to the fact that the broad visible band is actually composed of two separate emission bands originated from two different recombination processes, and should not had been treated as one emission band. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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