4.8 Article

Prospects of Nanoscience with Nanocrystals

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 1012-1057

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn506223h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union (EU) via ERC [306733]
  2. EU via ERC [614897]
  3. Ghent University (GOA Detavernier-Hens)
  4. FWO-Vlaanderen [G.0760.12]
  5. SIM (SIBO SoPPoM)
  6. BelSPo [IAP 735]
  7. Robert A. Welch Foundation [F-1464]
  8. NSF [CHE-1308813]
  9. EU FP7 under project UNION [FP7-NMP 310250]
  10. Guandong Province Technology Council, China [R-IND4601]
  11. Gesellschaft fur Mikro- und Nanoelektronik (GMe)
  12. Austrian Science fund FWF
  13. Aufbruch Bayern initiative of the state of Bavaria
  14. French National Research Agency (NANOFRET) [ANR-12-NANO-0007]
  15. NIRA [ANR-13-BS08-0011]
  16. Center for Advanced Solar Photophysics (CASP), an Energy Frontier Research Center of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science (OS) and Office of Basic Energy Sciences (OBES)
  17. EU
  18. U.S. Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Science and Engineering [DE-SC0002158]
  19. NSF MRSEC [DMR 08-20054]
  20. [CNECT-ICT-604391]
  21. [EH-H2020]
  22. European Research Council (ERC) [306733] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)
  23. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-12-NANO-0007] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)
  24. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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Colloidal nanocrystals (NCs, i.e., crystalline nanoparticles) have become an important class of materials with great potential for applications ranging from medicine to electronic and optoelectronic devices. Todays strong research focus on NCs has been prompted by the tremendous progress in their synthesis. Impressively narrow size distributions of just a few percent, rational shape-engineering, compositional modulation, electronic doping, and tailored surface chemistries are now feasible for a broad range of inorganic compounds. The performance of inorganic NC-based photovoltaic and light-emitting devices has become competitive to other state-of-the-art materials. Semiconductor NCs hold unique promise for near- and mid-infrared technologies, where very few semiconductor materials are available. On a purely fundamental side, new insights into NC growth, chemical transformations, and self-organization can be gained from rapidly progressing in situ characterization and direct imaging techniques. New phenomena are constantly being discovered in the photophysics of NCs and in the electronic properties of NC solids. In this Nano Focus, we review the state of the art in research on colloidal NCs focusing on the most recent works published in the last 2 years.

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