Literature DB >> 26132141

Electrochemical liquid-liquid-solid (ec-LLS) crystal growth: a low-temperature strategy for covalent semiconductor crystal growth.

Eli Fahrenkrug1, Stephen Maldonado1.   

Abstract

This Account describes a new electrochemical synthetic strategy for direct growth of crystalline covalent group IV and III-V semiconductor materials at or near ambient temperature conditions. This strategy, which we call "electrochemical liquid-liquid-solid" (ec-LLS) crystal growth, marries the semiconductor solvation properties of liquid metal melts with the utility and simplicity of conventional electrodeposition. A low-temperature liquid metal (i.e., Hg, Ga, or alloy thereof) acts simultaneously as the source of electrons for the heterogeneous reduction of oxidized semiconductor precursors dissolved in an electrolyte as well as the solvent for dissolution of the zero-valent semiconductor. Supersaturation of the semiconductor in the liquid metal triggers eventual crystal nucleation and growth. In this way, the liquid electrolyte-liquid metal-solid crystal phase boundary strongly influences crystal growth. As a synthetic strategy, ec-LLS has several intrinsic features that are attractive for preparing covalent semiconductor crystals. First, ec-LLS does not require high temperatures, toxic precursors, or high-energy-density semiconductor reagents. This largely simplifies equipment complexity and expense. In practice, ec-LLS can be performed with only a beaker filled with electrolyte and an electrical circuit capable of supplying a defined current (e.g., a battery in series with a resistor). By this same token, ec-LLS is compatible with thermally and chemically sensitive substrates (e.g., plastics) that cannot be used as deposition substrates in conventional syntheses of covalent semiconductors. Second, ec-LLS affords control over a host of crystal shapes and sizes through simple changes in common experimental parameters. As described in detail herein, large and small semiconductor crystals can be grown both homogeneously within a liquid metal electrode and heterogeneously at the interface of a liquid metal electrode and a seed substrate, depending on the particular details chosen for ec-LLS. Third, the rate of introduction of zero-valent materials into the liquid metal is precisely gated with a high degree of resolution by the applied potential/current. The intent of this Account is to summarize the key elements of ec-LLS identified to date, first contextualizing this method with respect to other semiconductor crystal growth methods and then highlighting some unique capabilities of ec-LLS. Specifically, we detail ec-LLS as a platform to prepare Ge and Si crystals from bulk- (∼1 cm(3)), micro- (∼10(-10) cm(3)), and nano-sized (∼10(-16) cm(3)) liquid metal electrodes in common solvents at low temperature. In addition, we describe our successes in the preparation of more compositionally complex binary covalent III-V semiconductors.

Entities:  

Year:  2015        PMID: 26132141     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.5b00158

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  2 in total

1.  Preparation and Characterization of Crystalline Silicon by Electrochemical Liquid-Liquid-Solid Crystal Growth in Ionic Liquid.

Authors:  Zhanxia Zhao; Cheng Yang; Liang Wu; Chenglong Zhang; Ruixue Wang; En Ma
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2021-04-27

2.  Role of chemisorbing species in growth at liquid metal-electrolyte interfaces revealed by in situ X-ray scattering.

Authors:  Andrea Sartori; Rajendra P Giri; Hiromasa Fujii; Svenja C Hövelmann; Jonas E Warias; Philipp Jordt; Chen Shen; Bridget M Murphy; Olaf M Magnussen
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-09-15       Impact factor: 17.694

  2 in total

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