4.2 Review

Imprinting chirality in inorganic nanomaterials for optoelectronic and bio-applications: strategies, challenges, and opportunities

Journal

MATERIALS ADVANCES
Volume 2, Issue 23, Pages 7620-7637

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1ma00846c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology, New Delhi [SRG/2019/000391]
  2. IIT Kanpur, India [IITK/CHM/2019044]
  3. Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR), New Delhi

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Chirality, a property of non-superimposable structures, is prevalent in biological systems and has led to significant growth in research on chiral inorganic nanomaterials. Advancements in synthesis and characterization technologies have allowed for the preparation of complex multi-functional materials, but challenges remain in transferring chirality to achiral nanomaterials, device fabrication, stability, and reproducibility. Additional research is needed to address these issues and explore potential applications of chiral nanomaterials in next-generation chiroptical devices.
Chirality, ubiquitous in biological systems, is the property of the non-superimposable structures found in both macroscopic and nanoscopic objects. In the last ten years, the research on chiral inorganic nanomaterials has witnessed tremendous growth due to their shape, size, crystal facets-controlled unparalleled physical, chemical, optoelectronic, and bio-compatibility features. Due to the quantum confinement, the chiral nanomaterials exhibit high anisotropy factors and, therefore, there has been an upsurge in research activities around the chiroptical and (bio)recognition properties of optically active inorganic nanomaterials. Advancements in synthesis and characterization technologies have made it possible to prepare complex multi-functional materials. Inorganic nanoparticles are known to exhibit fascinating semiconducting or metallic behavior and when combined with chirality, their usability in various devices is enhanced drastically due to an additional degree of freedom over achiral systems. In this review, we discuss different chemical routes to transfer chirality from intrinsic chiral systems into achiral nanomaterials for optoelectronics and bio-applications, in the light of recent experimental findings. Despite the progress in the research field of nanomaterials, imprinting chirality, device fabrication, scalability, long-term stability, and reproducibility remain challenging tasks that need to be addressed. Since the synthesis and growth mechanisms of chiral inorganic systems can be found in literature, here, we shed light only on the complimentary metal-oxides semiconductors (CMOS), and bio-compatibility of either intrinsic or imprinted chiral nanomaterials and their potential applications in next-generation chiroptical devices. We also discuss feasible strategies to resolve existing issues related to the integration into devices and their operational aspects.

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