| Literature DB >> 27411026 |
Shilpa N Raja1,2, Danylo Zherebetskyy1,3, Siva Wu1, Peter Ercius, Alexander Powers, Andrew C K Olson1, Daniel X Du, Liwei Lin, Sanjay Govindjee, Lin-Wang Wang1,4, Ting Xu1,2,4, A Paul Alivisatos1,2,4, Robert O Ritchie1,2.
Abstract
Nanoscale stress-sensing can be used across fields ranging from detection of incipient cracks in structural mechanics to monitoring forces in biological tissues. We demonstrate how tetrapod quantum dots (tQDs) embedded in block copolymers act as sensors of tensile/compressive stress. Remarkably, tQDs can detect their own composite dispersion and mechanical properties with a switch in optomechanical response when tQDs are in direct contact. Using experimental characterizations, atomistic simulations and finite-element analyses, we show that under tensile stress, densely packed tQDs exhibit a photoluminescence peak shifted to higher energies ("blue-shift") due to volumetric compressive stress in their core; loosely packed tQDs exhibit a peak shifted to lower energies ("red-shift") from tensile stress in the core. The stress shifts result from the tQD's unique branched morphology in which the CdS arms act as antennas that amplify the stress in the CdSe core. Our nanocomposites exhibit excellent cyclability and scalability with no degraded properties of the host polymer. Colloidal tQDs allow sensing in many materials to potentially enable autoresponsive, smart structural nanocomposites that self-predict impending fracture.Entities:
Keywords: Nanocomposite; fluorescence spectroscopy; mechanical; polymer; sensor; tetrapod nanocrystal
Year: 2016 PMID: 27411026 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b01907
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189