4.8 Article

Mechanistic Study of the Formation of Bright White Light-Emitting Ultrasmall CdSe Nanocrystals: Role of Phosphine Free Selenium Precursors

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages 1057-1070

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cm5043638

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
  2. NSF-MRI [MRI-1229514]
  3. NSF-MRI award [CHE-0619254]

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We have designed a new nonphosphinated reaction pathway, which includes synthesis of a new, highly reactive Se-bridged organic species (chalcogenide precursor), to produce bright white light-emitting ultrasmall CdSe nanocrystals of high quality under mild reaction conditions. The detailed characterization of structural properties of the selenium precursor through combined Se-77 NMR and laser desorption ionizationmass spectrometry (LDI-MS) provided valuable insights into Se release and delineated the nanocrystal formation mechanism at the molecular level. The H-1 NMR study showed that the rate of disappearance of Se precursor maintained a single-exponential decay with a rate constant of 2.3 x 10(-4) s(-1) at room temperature. Furthermore, the combination of LDI-MS and optical spectroscopy was used for the first time to deconvolute the formation mechanism of our bright white light-emitting nanocrystals, which demonstrated initial formation of a smaller key nanocrystal intermediate (CdSe)(19). Application of thermal driving force for destabilization resulted in (CdSe)n nanocrystal generation with n = 2936 through continuous dissolution and addition of monomer onto existing nanocrystals while maintaining a living-polymerization type growth mode. Importantly, our ultrasmall CdSe nanocrystals displayed an unprecedentedly large fluorescence quantum yield of similar to 27% for this size regime (<2.0 nm diameter). These mixed oleylamine and cadmium benzoate ligand-coated CdSe nanocrystals showed a fluorescence lifetime of similar to 90 ns, a significantly large value for such small nanocrystals, which was due to delocalization of the exciton wave function into the ligand monolayer. We believe our findings will be relevant to formation of other metal chalcogenide nanocrystals through expansion of the understanding and manipulation of surface ligand chemistry, which together will allow the preparation of artificial solids with high charge conductivity and mobility for advanced solid-state device applications.

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