Fluorescent Silicon Clusters and Nanoparticles
Klaus von Haeften

TL;DR
This review discusses the principles, production methods, and properties of fluorescent silicon nanostructures, highlighting how surface passivation and embedding influence their ability to emit light, with implications for bio-medicine and electronics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the mechanisms, experimental techniques, and recent insights into fluorescence in silicon clusters and nanoparticles, emphasizing the role of surface effects and embedding.
Findings
Passivated silicon clusters can emit fluorescence.
Quantum confinement influences silicon fluorescence.
Embedding in hosts enhances light emission.
Abstract
The fluorescence of silicon clusters is reviewed. Atomic clusters of silicon have been at the focus of research for several decades because of the relevance of size effects for material properties, the importance of silicon in electronics and the potential applications in bio-medicine. To date numerous examples of nanostructured forms of fluorescent silicon have been reported. This article introduces the principles and underlying concepts relevant for fluorescence of nanostructured silicon such as excitation, energy relaxation, radiative and non-radiative decay pathways and surface passivation. Experimental methods for the production of silicon clusters are presented. The geometric and electronic properties are reviewed and the implications for the ability to emit fluorescence are discussed. Free and pure silicon clusters produced in molecular beams appear to have properties that are…
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