Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.109, No.38, 17855-17860, 2005
Quantitative analysis of the photodegradation of emitting CdTe nanocrystals dispersed in glass films
CdTe nanocrystals (NCs, green- and red-emitting) prepared by an aqueous method were embedded into transparent glass films (15-20 mu m thick) using a sol-gel method. Photodegradation of the NCs in the films due to UV irradiation (365 nm) was investigated quantitatively by measuring the PL efficiency as a function of the irradiation time for various irradiation intensities at several temperatures. Since CdTe NCs prepared by an aqueous method incorporate sulfur atoms from the surfactant (thioglycolic acid) during prolonged reflux in an alkaline region, the surface of red-emitting NCs (3.9 nm Phi) is much more sulfur rich than that of green-emitting ones (2.6 nm Phi), as previously reported. Due to this composition difference, the degradation behaviors of the two types of NCs differ significantly. The photodegradation of green-emitting glass films depended linearly on the irradiation intensity, whereas that of red-emitting ones showed a quadratic dependence. The activation energies of the photodegradation for both types of films were similar, 304 +/- 9 and 288 +/- 7 meV/ particle, respectively. The NCs in the film were more than 2 orders of magnitude more robust than those in colloidal solutions. Comparison of the degradation of the glass films in air and in an Ar atmosphere revealed that the main mechanism of the photodegradation of the green-emitting NCs was oxidization from the first electronically excited state. The mechanism of the red-emitting NCs was not oxidization but a surface change probably related to a surfactant reaction.