| Literature DB >> 29182853 |
Fudong Wang1, William E Buhro1.
Abstract
Crystal-phase control is one of the most challenging problems in nanowire growth. We demonstrate that, in the solution-phase catalyzed growth of colloidal cadmium telluride (CdTe) quantum wires (QWs), the crystal phase can be controlled by manipulating the reaction chemistry of the Cd precursors and tri-n-octylphosphine telluride (TOPTe) to favor the production of either a CdTe solute or Te, which consequently determines the composition and (liquid or solid) state of the BixCdyTez catalyst nanoparticles. Growth of single-phase (e.g., wurtzite) QWs is achieved only from solid catalysts (y ≪ z) that enable the solution-solid-solid growth of the QWs, whereas the liquid catalysts (y ≈ z) fulfill the solution-liquid-solid growth of the polytypic QWs. Factors that affect the precursor-conversion chemistry are systematically accounted for, which are correlated with a kinetic study of the composition and state of the catalyst nanoparticles to understand the mechanism. This work reveals the role of the precursor-reaction chemistry in the crystal-phase control of catalytically grown colloidal QWs, opening the possibility of growing phase-pure QWs of other compositions.Entities:
Keywords: crystal-phase control; precursor-conversion chemistry; quantum wire; solution−liquid−solid; solution−solid−solid; wurtzite; zinc blende
Year: 2017 PMID: 29182853 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b06639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881