Description of Photoluminescence Spectroscopy: Principle, Instrumentation & Application.
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2. PHOTOLUMINESCENCE
Photoluminescence is the spontaneous emission of light from a material under optical
excitation. This light can be collected and analyzed spectrally, spatially and also
temporally. The term embraces both fluorescence and phosphorescence, which differ in
the time after irradiation over which the luminescence occurs.
Photoluminescence is excited by illumination of the device with light which has
a photon energy above the band gap energy in semiconductors.
4. SPECTROFLUOROMETER-PL
Basic Principle
Photoluminescence spectroscopy is a contactless, versatile, nondestructive, powerful optical
method of probing the electronic structure of materials.
Light is directed onto a sample, where it is absorbed and imparts excess energy into the
material in a process called photo−excitation.
One way this excess energy can be dissipated by the sample is through the emission of light,
or luminescence.
In the case of photo−excitation, this luminescence is called photoluminescence.
4
5. Photo excitation causes electrons within the material to move into permissible
excited states. When these electrons return to their equilibrium states, the excess
energy is released and may include the emission of light (a radiative process) or may
not (a non radiative process).
The energy of the emitted light (photoluminescence) relates to the difference in
energy levels between the two electron states involved in the transition between the
excited state and the equilibrium state. The quantity of the emitted light is related to
the relative contribution of the radiative process.
PL spectroscopy gives information only on the low lying energy levels of the
investigated system.
6. Experimental Set Up
A spectrofluorometer is an analytical instrument used to measure and record the
fluorescence of a sample. While recording the fluorescence, the excitation, emission
both wavelength may be scanned. With additional accessories, variation of signal
time, temperature, concentration, polarization, or other variables may be monitored.
Fluorescence spectrometers use laser sources, which contains wavelength selectors,
sample illumination, detectors and corrected spectra.
8. Illuminator source
• The continuous light source is 150 W ozone free xenon arc lamp.
• Light from the lamp is collected by a diamond turned elliptical mirror, and then
focused on the entrance slit of the excitation monochromator.
• The lamp housing is separated from the excitation monochromator by a quartz
window.
• This vents heat out of the instrument, and protects against the unlikely
occurrence of lamp failure.
• Resolution over the entire spectral range and minimize spherical aberrations
diffraction.
9. Monochromators
• It contains two monochromators : Excitation monochromator and Emission monochromator.
• They use all reflective optics to maintain high resolution over the entire spectral range, and
minimize spherical aberrations and diffraction.
Reflection Gratings
• A grating disperses the incident light by means of its vertical grooves.
• A spectrum is obtained by rotating the gratings contain 1200 grooves mm−1, and are blazed at
nm (excitation) at 500 nm (emission).
• Each grating is coated with MgF2 for protection against oxidation.
10. Slits
• The entrance and exit ports of each monochromator have continuously adjustable slits.
• The width of the slits on the excitation monochromator determines the band pass of light incident on the
sample.
• The emission monochromator’s slits control the intensity of the fluorescence signal recorder by the signal
detector.
• When setting slit width, the trade off is intensity of signal versus spectral resolution.
• The wider the slits are, the more light falls on the sample and detector, but the resolution decreases.
• The narrower slits are, the higher the resolution gets but at the expense of signal.
Shutters
• An excitation shutter is located just after the excitation monochromator’s exit slit.
• The shutter protects sample from photo bleaching or photo degradation from prolonged exposure to the light
source.
• An emission shutter is placed just before the emission monochromator’s entrance and protects the detector
from bright light.
11. Sample compartment
• The sample compartment accommodates various optional accessories, as well as fiber optic
bundles to take the excitation beam to a remote sample and return the emission beam to the
emission monochromator.
Detectors
• The signal detector is a photon counting detector. This detector is an R928P photomultiplier
which sends the signal to a photon counting module.
• The reference detector monitors the xenon lamp, in order to correct for wavelength and time
dependent output of the lamp. This detector is a UV enhance silicon photodiode, which is just
before the sample compartment.
Computer Control
• The entire control of the originates in PC with software and is transmitted through a serial link.
• On start up, the system automatically calibrates and presents itself for new experiments or
routines instantly called from memory.
12. In semiconductor systems, the most common radiative transition is between
states in the conduction and valence bands, with the energy difference being
known as the bandgap.
During a PL spectroscopy experiment, excitation is provided by laser light with
an energy much larger than the optical band gap. The photo excited carriers
consist of electrons and holes, which relax toward their respective band edges
and recombine by emitting light at the energy of the band gap.
Radiative transitions in semiconductors may also involve localized defects or
impurity levels therefore the analysis of the PL spectrum leads to the
identification of specific defects or impurities, and the magnitude of the PL
signal allows determining their concentration.
13. The respective rates of radiative and nonradiative recombination can be
estimated from a careful analysis of the temperature variation of the PL intensity
and PL decay time.
At higher temperatures nonradiative recombination channels are activated and
the PL intensity decreases exponentially.
Thus photoluminescence is a process of photon excitation followed by photon
emission and important for determining band gap, purity, crystalline quality and
impurity defect levels of semiconducting material. It also helps to understand the
underlying physics of the recombination mechanism.
14. PL spectrum is quite different from absorption spectrum in the sense that
absorption spectrum measures transitions from the ground state to excited state,
while photoluminescence deals with transitions from the excited state to the ground
state.
The period between absorption and emission is typically extremely short.
An excitation spectrum is a graph of emission intensity versus excitation wavelength
which looks very much like an absorption spectrum.
The value of wavelength at which the molecules absorbs energy can be used as the
excitation wavelength which provide a more intense emission at a red shifted
wavelength, with a value usually twice of the excitation wavelength.
15. Characteristics PL
frequencies
Changes in Frequency
of PL peaks
Polarization of PL peak
Width of PLpeak
Intensity of PL peak
Composition
Stress/Strain
State
Symmetry/
Orientation
Quality
Amount
ANALYSES OF SAMPLES FINGERPRINTS
Captured by PL Spectra
One broad peak may be
superposition of two or
several peaks: De-
convolution is needed
Number of peaks
Peak Intensities
Peak position
FWHM
Peak shape
18. DECAY PROCESSES
Internal conversion:
• Movement of electron from one electronic state to another without emission of a photon e.g. S2 S1 lasts about
1012 sec
Predissociation internal conversion:
• Electron relaxes into a state where energy of that state is high enough to rupture the bond.
Vibrational relaxation (1010-1011sec):
• Energy loss associated with electron movement to lower vibrational state without photon emission.
Intersystem crossing:
• Conversion from singlet state to a triplet state. e.g. S1 toT1
External conversion:
• A nonradiative process in which energy of an excited state is given to another molecule (e.g. solvent or other solute
molecules).
• Related to the collisional frequency of excited species with other molecules in the solution.
• Cooling the solution minimizes this effect.
19. In PL-excitation (PLE) measurements, the
intensity is recorded as a function of excitation
photon energy.
Under a condition of fast intra-band relaxation,
PLE is equivalent to linear absorption spectra.
20. Recombination mechanisms
The return to equilibrium, also known as "recombination," can involve both radiative and
nonradiative processes. The amount of PL emission and its dependence on the level of photo-
excitation and temperature are directly related to the dominant recombination process.
Material quality
Nonradiative processes are associated with localized defect levels.
Material quality can be measured by quantifying the amount of radiative recombination.
21. PL spectra and their intensity dependencies can allow to:
Determine the band gap energy and/or the wavelength of maximum gain
Determine the composition of ternary or quaternary layers
Determine impurity levels (which can e.g. Lead to the emission of light with longer wavelengths than otherwise
possible)
Investigate recombination mechanisms
Measure the purity and crystalline quality of semiconductors.
Determine the minority carrier lifetime of semiconductors like GaAs. {Time-resolved photoluminescence (TRPL)}
Determine the band gap, exciton life time,exciton energy, bi-exciton, etc. of semiconductor and other functional
materials.
Determine the properties, e.g. Structure and concentration, of the Emitting species.
23. Figure
a. PL spectrum measured over the
temperature range from 77 K to
300 K of a monolayer MoS2
after being annealed to 500uC.
b. The PL at 77 K with different
excitation laser power. Both a and
b were taken in the presence of N2
gas (50 Torr).
c. Integrated PL intensity of bound
exciton (XB) and free exciton
(X0) as a function of excitation
laser power.
24. Figure
a. PL spectrum of a monolayer MoS2 at
300 K in the presence of N2 or in
vacuum before and after irradiation.
b. The same taken at 77 K in vacuum.
c. PL spectrum taken at 77 K in N2 on
WSe2 and MoSe2 monolayers before
and after the irradiation.
25. CONCLUSIONS FROM RESULT OF PL SPECTRA
Since this PL peak appears after the irradiation and its intensity increases at higher
doses, we attribute it to radiative recombination of bound excitons (XB), i.e Neutral
excitons (X0) bound to defects.
Peak appears relatively stronger and broader than in the irradiated samples, possibly
due to a higher density of point defects and defect clusters created by annealing.
Vacancies generation by particle irradiation is a series of highly non-equilibrium,
random and isolated events, while thermal annealing is much slower and may
facilitate formation of vacancy clusters with different configurations. These defect
complexes with different clustering configurations may have different exciton binding
energies, thus broadening the observed defect PL peak.
26. Intensity of XB exhibits a sub-linear laser power dependence with a tendency to saturate at high
excitation powers, whereas the free exciton intensity (X0) scales linearly without any sign of saturation .
As a result, the overall PL spectrum is mostly dominated by the defect peak, XB, at low excitation
intensities, and the X0 line becomes observable only at high excitation intensities
Field of 2d semiconductors optical quality at room temperature (pl intensity and sharpness) cannot be
used as criteria to assess the crystal quality of the monolayers. The defective monolayers yield even
stronger PL intensity at room temperature. However, the PL spectrum at 77 K immediately tells the
difference between the pristine and defective monolayers.
The occurring of the defect PL peak was instantaneously reversible when the chamber is purged with or
pumped out of N2. This implies that the interaction between the defect sites and the N2 gas molecules
is weak (physisorbed), but dictates the optical emission of the material.
27. Anion vacancies as point defects drastically modify the optical properties of monolayer tmds in such a way
that:
(1) The overall integrated PL intensity is enhanced,
(2) A new, defect related peak is observed below the bandgap. These effects are prominent at low
temperatures and in gas environments (such as N2).
The new peak originates from bound excitons that are formed by localizing excitons at the defect sites.
The overall enhancement in the PL intensity is attributed to an electronic effect of the defects:
the gas molecules drain free electrons from the material via these defect sites, causing a transition of exciton
population from charged to neutral (both free and bound) excitons
28. Rare earth doped TiO2-CdS and TiO2-CdS composites with improvement
of photocatalytic hydrogen evolution under visible light irradiation
Peng_2012
30. CONCLUSION FROM RESULT OF PL SPECTRA
To reveal the effect of RE3 þ-doping on the separation of
photogenerated electron hole pairs, the PL spectra of Pt/TiO2-CdS and
Pt/RE/TiO2-CdS were examined.
The PL spectra of Pt/TiO2-CdS and Pt/RE/TiO2-CdS are similar and
show a broad light emission signal. However, the PL emission intensity
of Pt/RE/TiO2-CdS is much weaker than that of Pt/TiO2-CdS.
Their PL intensity follows in this order: Pt/La3þ/ TiO2 -
CdSoPt/Eu3þ/TiO2-CdSoPt/Er3þ/TiO2-CdSoPt/ Gd3þ/TiO2-
CdSoPt/TiO2-CdS. This is contrary to their photoactivity order.
33. The photon-excited non-equilibrium carriers in semiconductor recombine mainly via two routes—radiative and
non-radiative recombination.
Generally, the photoluminescence emissions on semiconductor materials are originated from the radiative
recombination of photo-generated electrons and holes, leading to photoluminescence signals.
In the other photoluminescence process, the excited electrons firstly transfer from the conduction band to
different sub-bands, e.g. surface oxygen vacancies or defects, via non-radiative transition, and subsequently
transfer from the sub- bands to the valance band via radiative transition with the release of
photoluminescence signals.
These defects promote the charge separation and restrain the electron–hole recombination which in turn
increases the lifetime of the photo-induced charge carriers.
The corresponding photoluminescence signals can be observed in the visible region.
All of these results confirmed that the cement matrix disorder through the creation of defect levels resulted in
modification of absorption characteristics.
34. TL Spectra results:
TiO2-photocatalyst mainly consist of four emission bands, a strong violet emission centered at 419 nm (2.96
eV), at violet-blue with a maximum at 446 nm (2.78 eV), a blue-green band at 483 nm (2.57 eV), and a weak
green band at 527 nm (2.35 eV).
The photoluminescence signals observed at 419 nm (2.96 eV) and 446 nm (2.78 eV) are due to band–band
transitions for anatase and rutile TiO2crystal phases, respectively.
The two peaks at 483 nm (2.57 eV) and 527 nm (2.35 eV) of TiO2photocatalyst were attributed to the transition
from the oxygen vacancies with two trapped electrons and one trapped electron to the valence band of TiO2,
respectively.
A observed widening of the band at 457 nm (2.71 eV) on TiO2-photocatalyst is also ascribed to the radiative
recombination of excitons of the shallow traps identified with oxygen vacancies and Ti3+.
Fluorescence vs Phosphorescence
Phosphorescence is always at longer wavelength compared with fluorescence
Phosphorescence is narrower compared with fluorescence
Phosphorescence is weaker compared with fluorescence
Absorption vs Emission
absorption is mirrored relative to emission
Absorption is always on the shorter wavelength compared to emission
Absorption vibrational progression reflects vibrational level in the electronic excited states, while the emission vibrational progression reflects vibrational level in the electronic ground states
0 transition of absorption is not overlap with the 0 of emission