Probing Permanent Dipoles in CdSe Nanoplatelets with Transient Electric Birefringence
Ivan Dozov, Claire Goldmann, Patrick Davidson, Benjamin Ab\'ecassis

TL;DR
This study uses transient electric birefringence to reveal a significant ground-state electric dipole in CdSe nanoplatelets, impacting their optical properties and stacking behavior, with implications for optoelectronic applications.
Contribution
It is the first to directly measure and analyze the electric dipole in zinc-blende CdSe nanoplatelets using TEB, highlighting their large dipolar moments and stacking-induced dipole modifications.
Findings
Nanoplatelets exhibit a large electric dipole (>245 D) aligned with their length.
Stacking of nanoplatelets cancels in-plane dipoles but enhances normal components.
Dipolar component in stacks is approximately 80 D, influencing their electro-optic response.
Abstract
Zinc-blende CdSe semiconducting nanoplatelets (NPL) show outstanding quantum confinement properties thanks to their small, atomically-controlled, thickness. For example, they display extremely sharp absorption peaks that make them very interesting objects for optoelectronic applications. However, the presence of a ground-state electric dipole for these nanoparticles has not yet been investigated. We therefore used transient electric birefringence (TEB) to probe the electric dipole of 5-monolayer thick zinc-blende CdSe NPL with a parallelepipedic shape. We studied a dilute dispersion of isolated NPL coated with branched ligands and we measured, as a function of time, the birefringence induced by DC and AC field pulses. The electro-optic behavior proves the presence of a large dipolar moment (> 245 D) oriented along the length of the platelets. We then induced the slow face-to-face…
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