Domaines
Condensed matter
Non-linear optics
Nanophysics, nanophotonics, 2D materials and van der Waals heterostructures,, surface physicss, new electronic states of matter
Type of internship
Expérimental et théorique Description
Scientific description: The aim of this experimental project is to use a pump-probe optical microcopy method to spatiotemporally study microscopic charge and thermal transport and relaxation dynamics in nanocrystal- based optoelectronics systems. Energy carrier transport at the nanoscale is fundamental to energy conversion applications. While advanced spectroscopic methods grant an understanding of excited-state dynamics in isolated materials, many physical questions about the microscopic nature of transport in optoelectronics devices remain underexplored. To address this area, one needs a probe of local charge transport with sub-nanosecond time resolution and sub-micron spatial resolution in a material in realistic device conditions. Our approach is to do ultrafast microscopy and fabricate nanocrystal-based optoelectronics. These studies will reveal microscopic structure–property relationships that connect nanoscale carrier dynamics to macro-scale energy conversion.
During the timeframe of the master’s internship, the student will perform state-of-the-art experiments on nanocrystal optoelectronics, and perform analysis and modeling of nanoscale energy transport. The goal is that the student continues on to do a PhD, during which the student will spatiotemporally measure the microscopic charge and thermal transport characteristics to resolve fundamental problems in colloidal semiconductor nanocrystal systems and advanced energy conversion devices.
Contact
James Utterback