Zero-threshold optical gain in electrochemically doped nanoplatelets and the physics behind it
Jaco J. Geuchies, Robbert Dijkhuizen, Marijn Koel, Gianluca Grimaldi,, Indy du Foss\'e, Wiel H. Evers, Zeger Hens, Arjan J. Houtepen

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that electrochemically doped CdSe/CdS/ZnS nanoplatelets exhibit zero-threshold optical gain over a broad spectrum, due to their unique size and excitonic properties, making them highly effective for lasing applications.
Contribution
It reveals that electrochemical doping eliminates the gain threshold in nanoplatelets, achieving high gain coefficients and bridging the gap between quantum dots and 2D materials.
Findings
Gain threshold of one excitation per nanoplatelet
Electrochemical doping fully bleaches exciton transitions
Achieves gain coefficients of several thousand cm-1
Abstract
Colloidal nanoplatelets (NPLs) are promising materials for lasing applications. The properties are usually discussed in the framework of 2D materials, where strong excitonic effects dominate the optical properties near the band edge. At the same time, NPLs have finite lateral dimensions such that NPLs are not true extended 2D structures. Here we study the photophysics and gain properties of CdSe/CdS/ZnS core-shell-shell NPLs upon electrochemical n doping and optical excitation. Steady-state absorption and PL spectroscopy show that excitonic effects are weaker in core-shell-shell nanoplatelets due to the reduced exciton binding energy. Transient absorption studies reveal a gain threshold of only one excitation per nanoplatelet. Using electrochemical n doping we observe the complete bleaching of the band edge exciton transitions. Combining electrochemical doping with transient absorption…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Dots Synthesis And Properties · Chalcogenide Semiconductor Thin Films · Nonlinear Optical Materials Studies
