Characterization of Carrier Cooling Bottleneck in Silicon Nanoparticles by Extreme Ultraviolet (XUV) Transient Absorption Spectroscopy
Abstract
Silicon nanoparticles have the promise to surpass the theoretical efficiency limit of single-junction silicon photovoltaics by the creation of a "phonon bottleneck", a theorized slowing of the cooling rate of hot optical phonons that in turn reduces the cooling rate of hot carriers in the material. To verify the presence of a phonon bottleneck in silicon nanoparticles requires simultaneous resolution of electronic and structural changes at short timescales. Here, extreme ultraviolet transient absorption spectroscopy is used to observe the excited state electronic and lattice dynamics in polycrystalline silicon nanoparticles following 800 nm photoexcitation, which excites carriers with 0.35 0.03 eV excess energy above the 1 conduction band minimum. The nanoparticles have nominal 100 nm diameters with crystalline grain sized of about ~16 nm. The extracted carrier-phonon and phonon-phonon relaxation times of the nanoparticles are compared to those for a silicon (100) single crystal thin film at similar carrier densities (2 x 1019 cm-3 for the nanoparticles and 6 x 1019 cm-3 for the thin film). The measured carrier-phonon and phonon-phonon scattering lifetimes for the polycrystalline nanoparticles are 870 40 fs and 17.5 0.3 ps, respectively, versus 195 20 fs and 8.1 0.2 ps, respectively, for the silicon thin film. The reduced scattering rates observed in the nanoparticles are consistent with the phonon bottleneck hypothesis.
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