Nanomaterials Research

Optical Insights into Nanoscale Materials

Studying charge carrier dynamics, nanoscale optical properties, and photophysical processes in nanomaterials using optical and time-resolved characterization method
Schematic illustration of nanostructured materials on a substrate highlighting heterogeneous nanoscale architectures studied by optical and time-resolved characterization.
Table of contents

Probing Nanomaterials with Optical Techniques

Nanomaterials Research

Nanomaterials research addresses how reducing material dimensions to the nanometer scale fundamentally alters physical behavior. Confinement, large surface-to-volume ratios, and interface effects dominate the optical and electronic properties of these systems, often overriding bulk characteristics. Research in this field spans inorganic, organic, and hybrid nanostructures and focuses on linking synthesis, morphology, and environmental factors to measurable optical signatures that reveal structure–property relationships inaccessible at larger length scales.

Optical Properties and Photophysical Processes at the Nanoscale

Optical responses of nanomaterials are governed by quantum confinement, dielectric contrast, and surface states. Absorption and emission spectra often broaden or shift due to size dispersion and local heterogeneity. Beyond steady-state observables, photophysical processes such as exciton formation, carrier trapping, and radiative or nonradiative recombination occur on fast timescales and are highly sensitive to nanoscale morphology, interfacial structure, and the surrounding environment.

Charge Carrier Dynamics and Energy Relaxation in Nanomaterials

After optical excitation, charge carriers in nanomaterials undergo relaxation pathways that differ from bulk systems. Nonradiative recombination, surface trapping, and energy transfer frequently dominate carrier lifetimes and energy dissipation. These processes depend on particle size, defect density, and interfacial coupling. Time-resolved measurements provide direct access to carrier lifetimes and relaxation kinetics, enabling quantitative insight into loss mechanisms that limit optical efficiency and overall material performance.

Structural Heterogeneity, Interfaces, and Defect Effects

Nanomaterials are often structurally diverse. Variations in size, shape, crystallinity, and surface chemistry lead to spatially heterogeneous optical behavior. Interfaces between nanostructures and their substrates or surrounding matrices introduce additional electronic states that influence emission efficiency, charge transfer, and carrier mobility. Defects can act as quenching centers or localized emitters, making spatially resolved optical characterization essential for correlating structural variations with photophysical response.

Optical and Time-Resolved Characterization of Nanomaterials

Optical characterization techniques provide non-contact access to intrinsic nanomaterial properties. Steady-state (PL) and time-resolved photoluminescence (TRPL) reveal emission pathways, carrier lifetimes, and recombination dynamics. Imaging-based approaches extend these measurements by resolving spatial variations across individual nanostructures or ensembles. The combination of spectral, temporal, and spatial information enables a comprehensive understanding of nanoscale optical behavior under realistic experimental conditions.

Application Example: Carbon Dots

Carbon dots are nanoscale carbon-based materials with size-dependent optical properties and strong, tunable photoluminescence. Their emission behavior is highly sensitive to surface chemistry, local environment, and coupling to other nanostructures, making them attractive model systems for nanomaterials research.

Photoluminescence quantum yield and lifetime trends of carbon dots coupled to metal nanoparticles showing emission enhancement and lifetime shortening with increasing nanoparticle ratio.

Multimodal SHG and TRPL imaging of TMD monolayers

Monolayer MoS₂ and WSe₂ on flexible substrates were investigated using reflection imaging, SHG, TRPL, and two-photon excitation TRPL. Combining linear and nonlinear optical contrasts within a single microscope enables local correlation of structure, symmetry, and emission dynamics in two-dimensional dichalcogenide monolayers.

TRPL decay curves of pristine and polyethyleneimine-modified carbon dots in different solvents showing increased photoluminescence lifetimes after surface functionalization.

Carbon dots with near-infrared absorption and emission

Surface modification of carbon dots enables photoluminescence in the near-infrared spectral range. Time-resolved photoluminescence measurements show increased lifetimes after polyethyleneimine functionalization, suggesting reduced nonradiative energy dissipation and improved excited-state stability in aqueous environments.

Time-resolved photoluminescence measurements of carbon dot–graphene hybrid devices showing decreasing carrier lifetimes with increasing excitation power.

Carbon dot–graphene hybrid white laser characterization

Hybrid devices combining fluorescent carbon dots with crumpled graphene enable cavity-free white laser emission. Power-dependent TRPL measurements reveal decreasing carrier lifetimes under increasing excitation, consistent with stimulated emission. Graphene-induced scattering is thought to enhance optical feedback within the nanostructured architecture.

Relevant for Your Research​

Matching Methods

Excitation and emission spectra in steady-state photoluminescence spectroscopy
Materials Science
In-Depth Scientific Resources

Premium Resources

Access in-depth application notes and scientific posters with detailed methods, measurement data, and real-world use cases.

Customer Video: Designer van der Waals Materials for Quantum Optical Emission

Webinar on quantum optics in 2D TMD materials featuring multimodal imaging with MicroTime 100 and FluoTime 300 to study photoluminescence and light–matter interactions.

Poster: SHG Imaging Microscopy

Second-harmonic generation imaging with picosecond lasers reveals crystal structure, defects, and layer orientation in advanced materials.

Customer Video: Multimodal Microscopy of Halide Perovskite Solar Cells

In this video, Sam Stranks (University of Cambridge), gives an overview of halide perovskite solar cell research using multimodal microscopy to study luminescence, recombination, degradation, and pathways to improve efficiency and stability.

Application Note: Time-Resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy and Microscopy

How time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy and microscopy reveal excited-state dynamics, defects, and charge-carrier processes

Poster: TRPL of Up-Conversion Nanoparticle

TRPL reveals energy transfer processes, lifetimes, and spatially resolved optical properties

Poster: High Spatial Photoluminescence Investigation of Nanostructures

Poster on high-spatial photoluminescence studies of nanostructures and quantum emitters using time-resolved confocal microscopy and spectroscopy.

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