Literature DB >> 11535092

Photochemical instability of CdSe nanocrystals coated by hydrophilic thiols.

J Aldana1, Y A Wang, X Peng.   

Abstract

The photochemical instability of CdSe nanocrystals coated by hydrophilic thiols was studied nondestructively and systematically in water. The results revealed that the photochemical instability of the nanocrystals actually included three distinguishable processes, namely the photocatalytic oxidation of the thiol ligands on the surface of nanocrystals, the photooxidation of the nanocrystals, and the precipitation of the nanocrystals. At first, the thiol ligands on the surface of a nanocrystal were gradually photocatalytically oxidized using the CdSe nanocrystal core as the photocatalyst. This photocatalytic oxidation process was observed as a zero-order reaction in terms of the concentration of the free thiols in the solution. The photogenerated holes in a nanocrystal were trapped onto the thiol ligands bound on the surface of the nanocrystal, which initiated the photooxidation of the ligands and protected the nanocrystal from any photooxidation. After nearly all of the thiol ligands on the surface of the nanocrystals were converted into disulfides, the system underwent several different pathways. If the disulfides were soluble in water, then all of the disulfides fell into the solution at the end of this initial process, and the nanocrystals precipitated out of the solution without much variation over their size and size distribution. When the disulfides were insoluble in water, they likely formed a micelle-like structure around the nanocrystal core and kept it soluble in the solution. In this case, the nanocrystals only precipitated after severe oxidation, which took a long period of time. If the system contained excess free thiol ligands, they replaced the photochemically generated disulfides and maintained the stability and solubility of the nanocrystals. The initiation stage of the photooxidation of CdSe nanocrystals themselves increased as the thickness and packing density of the ligand shell increased. This was explained by considering the ligand shell on the surface of a nanocrystal as the diffusion barrier of the oxygen species from the bulk solution into the interface between the nanocrystal and the surface ligands. Experimental results clearly indicated that the initiation stage of the photooxidation was not caused by the chemical oxidation of the system kept in air under dark conditions or the hydrolysis of the cadmium-thiol bonds on the surface of the nanocrystals, both of which were magnitudes slower than the photocatalytic oxidation of the surface ligands if they occurred at all. The results described in this contribution have already been applied for designing new types of thiol ligands which dramatically improved the photochemical stability of CdSe nanocrystals with a ligand shell that is as thin as approximately 1 nm.

Entities:  

Year:  2001        PMID: 11535092     DOI: 10.1021/ja016424q

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  79 in total

1.  Quantum dots as strain- and metabolism-specific microbiological labels.

Authors:  J A Kloepfer; R E Mielke; M S Wong; K H Nealson; G Stucky; J L Nadeau
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2003-07       Impact factor: 4.792

Review 2.  Probing cellular events, one quantum dot at a time.

Authors:  Fabien Pinaud; Samuel Clarke; Assa Sittner; Maxime Dahan
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2010-03-30       Impact factor: 28.547

3.  Highly Photoluminescent and Stable Aqueous ZnS Quantum Dots.

Authors:  Hui Li; Wan Y Shih; Wei-Heng Shih
Journal:  Ind Eng Chem Res       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 3.720

4.  Synthesis of functionalized amphiphilic polymers for coating quantum dots.

Authors:  Dominik Jańczewski; Nikodem Tomczak; Ming-Yong Han; G Julius Vancso
Journal:  Nat Protoc       Date:  2011-09-15       Impact factor: 13.491

Review 5.  The surface science of nanocrystals.

Authors:  Michael A Boles; Daishun Ling; Taeghwan Hyeon; Dmitri V Talapin
Journal:  Nat Mater       Date:  2016-02       Impact factor: 43.841

6.  Room temperature synthesis of PbSe quantum dots in aqueous solution: stabilization by interactions with ligands.

Authors:  Oliva M Primera-Pedrozo; Zikri Arslan; Bakhtiyor Rasulev; Jerzy Leszczynski
Journal:  Nanoscale       Date:  2012-01-25       Impact factor: 7.790

7.  Organic-to-Aqueous Phase Transfer of Cadmium Chalcogenide Quantum Dots using a Sulfur-Free Ligand for Enhanced Photoluminescence and Oxidative Stability.

Authors:  Raul Calzada; Christopher M Thompson; Dana E Westmoreland; Kedy Edme; Emily A Weiss
Journal:  Chem Mater       Date:  2016-08-26       Impact factor: 9.811

8.  Thiol-capped CdTe quantum dots with two-photon excitation for imaging high autofluorescence background living cells.

Authors:  Tao Wang; Ji-Yao Chen; Shen Zhen; Pei-Nan Wang; Chang-Chun Wang; Wu-Li Yang; Qian Peng
Journal:  J Fluoresc       Date:  2008-12-23       Impact factor: 2.217

9.  Probing synaptic signaling with quantum dots.

Authors:  Paul De Koninck; Simon Labrecque; Colin D Heyes; Paul W Wiseman
Journal:  HFSP J       Date:  2007-05-02

10.  Nanocrystal synthesis in an amphibious bath: spontaneous generation of hydrophilic and hydrophobic surface coatings.

Authors:  Andrew M Smith; Shuming Nie
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 15.336

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