Organic Molecules as Tools To Control the Growth, Surface Structure, and Redox Activity of Colloidal Quantum Dots

被引:65
|
作者
Weiss, Emily A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Northwestern Univ, Dept Chem, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
关键词
PHOTOINDUCED ELECTRON-TRANSFER; CDSE NANOCRYSTALS; CADMIUM-SELENIDE; INFRARED-SPECTROSCOPY; OPTICAL-PROPERTIES; INTRABAND RELAXATION; EXCITON CONFINEMENT; LIGAND-EXCHANGE; SEMICONDUCTOR; PHOTOLUMINESCENCE;
D O I
10.1021/ar400078u
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
In order to achieve efficient and reliable technology that can harness solar energy, the behavior of electrons and energy at I interfaces between different types or phases of materials must be understood. Conversion of light to chemical or electrical potential in condensed phase systems requires gradients in free energy that allow the movement of energy or charge carriers and facilitate redox reactions and dissociation of photoexcited states (excitons) into free charge carriers. Such free energy gradients are present at interfaces between solid and liquid phases or between inorganic and organic materials. Nanostructured materials have a higher density of these interfaces than bulk materials. Nanostructured materials, however, have a structural and chemical complexity that does not exist in bulk materials, which presents a difficult challenge: to lower or eliminate energy barriers to electron and energy flux that inevitably result from forcing different materials to meet in a spatial region of atomic dimensions. Chemical functionalization of nanostructured materials is perhaps the most versatile and powerful strategy for controlling the potential energy landscape of their interfaces and for minimizing losses in energy conversion efficiency due to interfacial structural and electronic defects. Colloidal quantum dots are semiconductor nanocrystals synthesized with wet-chemical methods and coated in organic molecules. Chemists can use these model systems to study the effects of chemical functionalization of nanoscale organic/inorganic interfaces on the optical and electronic properties of a nanostructured material, and the behavior of electrons and energy at interfaces. The optical and electronic properties of colloidal quantum dots have an intense sensitivity to their surface chemistry, and their organic adlayers make them dispersible in solvent. This allows researchers to use high signal-to-noise solution-phase spectroscopy to study processes at interfaces. In this Account, I describe the varied roles of organic molecules in controlling the structure and properties of colloidal quantum dots. Molecules serve as surfactant that determines the mechanism and rate of nucleation and growth and the final size and surface structure of a quantum dot. Anionic surfactant in the reaction mixture allows precise control over the size of the quantum dot core but also drives cation enrichment and structural disordering of the quantum dot surface. Molecules serve as chemisorbed ligands that dictate the energetic distribution of surface states. These states can then serve as thermodynamic traps for excitonic charge carriers or couple to delocalized states of the quantum dot core to change the confinement energy of excitonic carriers. Ligands, therefore, in some cases, dramatically shift the ground state absorption and photoluminescence spectra of quantum dots. Molecules also act as protective layers that determine the probability of redox processes between quantum dots and other molecules. How much the ligand shell insulates the quantum dot from electron exchange with a molecular redox partner depends less on the length or degree of conjugation of the native ligand and more on the density and packing structure of the adlayer and the size and adsorption mode of the molecular redox partner. Control of quantum dot properties in these examples demonstrates that nanoscale interfaces, while complex, can be rationally designed to enhance or specify the functionality of a nanostructured system.
引用
收藏
页码:2607 / 2615
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Colloidal Quantum Dots as Photocatalysts for Triplet Excited State Reactions of Organic Molecules
    Jiang, Yishu
    Weiss, Emily A.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2020, 142 (36) : 15219 - 15229
  • [2] Orbital Mixing between Colloidal Quantum Dots and Surface-Bound Molecules
    Zhao, Guohui
    Ma, Wenkai
    Yu, Shuwen
    Zhang, Jianbing
    Wu, Kaifeng
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 2022, 13 (51): : 11892 - 11898
  • [3] Two-Photon Absorption in CdSe Colloidal Quantum Dots Compared to Organic Molecules
    Makarov, Nikolay S.
    Lau, Pick Chung
    Olson, Christopher
    Velizhanin, Kirill A.
    Solntsev, Kyril M.
    Kieu, Khanh
    Kilina, Svetlana
    Tretiak, Sergei
    Norwood, Robert A.
    Peyghambarian, Nasser
    Perry, Joseph W.
    ACS NANO, 2014, 8 (12) : 12572 - 12586
  • [4] Understanding the nucleation and growth of colloidal quantum dots
    Campos, Michael
    Rreza, Iva
    Hamachi, Leslie
    Abecassis, Benjamin
    Chan, Emory
    Owen, Jonathan
    ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA A-FOUNDATION AND ADVANCES, 2017, 73 : A236 - A236
  • [5] Surface Engineering of Colloidal Quantum Dots for Organic and Biocompatible Solution-Processable Materials
    Sharma, Shailesh Narain
    RECENT TRENDS IN MATERIALS AND DEVICES, ICRTMD 2015, 2017, 178 : 57 - 63
  • [6] Photobleaching of Phthalocyanine Molecules within a Complex with Colloidal Quantum Dots
    Gvozdev D.A.
    Maksimov E.G.
    Paschenko V.Z.
    Moscow University Biological Sciences Bulletin, 2020, 75 (1) : 7 - 12
  • [7] Control of the Redox Activity of Quantum Dots through Introduction of Fluoroalkanethiolates into Their Ligand Shells
    Weinberg, David J.
    He, Chen
    Weiss, Emily A.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 138 (07) : 2319 - 2326
  • [8] Control of the Redox Activity of Quantum Dots through Introduction of Fluoroalkanethiolates into Their Ligand Shells
    Weinberg, David J.
    He, Chen
    Weiss, Emily A.
    Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2016, 138 (07): : 2319 - 2326
  • [9] Model for Adsorption of Ligands to Colloidal Quantum Dots with Concentration-Dependent Surface Structure
    Morris-Cohen, Adam J.
    Vasilenko, Vladislav
    Amin, Victor A.
    Reuter, Matthew G.
    Weiss, Emily A.
    ACS NANO, 2012, 6 (01) : 557 - 565
  • [10] Patterning of colloidal quantum dots for the generation of surface plasmon
    Park, Yeonsang
    Roh, Young-Geun
    Kim, Un Jeong
    Chung, Dae-Young
    Suh, Hwansoo
    Kim, Jineun
    Cheon, Sangmo
    Lee, Jaesoong
    Kim, Tae-Ho
    Cho, Kyung-Sang
    Lee, Chang-Won
    JOURNAL OF MICRO-NANOLITHOGRAPHY MEMS AND MOEMS, 2013, 12 (04):