A picosecond bleaching study of quantum-confined cadmium sulfide microcrystallites in a polymer film

Abstract
We report a picosecond pump–probe study of 55 Å cadmium sulfide microcrystallites embedded in polymer films. Large negative absorbance changes at wavelengths corresponding to energies near the band gap are observed. This absorption bleaching and the associated changes in refractive index are mainly responsible for the large nonlinearity observed in degenerate four-wave mixing experiments. Based on photoluminescence data, the known electron-trapping cross section of defects, and these pump–probe experiments, we show that the conventional carrier density-dependent band-filling mechanism cannot account for the data, and the absorption bleaching is due to the saturation of the excitonic transition. We further show that the phase-space filling and exchange effects from exciton–exciton and exciton-free carrier interactions fail to account for the observed data. Instead, we propose that the exciton-trapped carrier interaction is mainly responsible for the observed bleaching of the excitonic absorption. This interaction is unique for small semiconductor clusters since the presence of a high density of defects (most likely on the surfaces) causes the extremely rapid trapping of free carriers. According to this model, the recovery time of the absorption bleaching is determined by the trapped-carrier relaxation time, which is sensitive to the fabrication methods and can be controlled by surface chemistry. Our study also demonstrates that one needs to understand the effects of surfaces and control the surface chemistry before the important question of size effects on the nonlinear optical properties can be addressed.