| Literature DB >> 31525055 |
Evert Dhaene1, Jonas Billet1, Ellie Bennett2, Isabel Van Driessche1, Jonathan De Roo1,2,3.
Abstract
1-Octadecene is a widely used solvent for high-temperature nanocrystal synthesis (120-320 °C). Here, we show that 1-octadecene spontaneously polymerizes under these conditions, and the resulting poly(1-octadecene) has a comparable solubility and size to nanocrystals stabilized by hydrophobic ligands. Typical purification procedures (precipitation/redispersion cycles or size exclusion chromatography) fail to separate the poly(1-octadecene) impurity from the nanocrystal product. To avoid formation of poly(1-octadecene), we replace 1-octadecene with saturated, aliphatic solvents. Alternatively, the nanocrystals' native ligands are exchanged for polar ligands, leading to significant solubility differences between nanocrystals and poly(1-octadecene), therefore allowing isolation of pure nanocrystals, free from polymer impurities. These results will help design superior syntheses and improve nanocrystal purity, an important factor in many applications.Entities:
Keywords: Quantum dots; nanoparticles; octadecene; surface chemistry
Year: 2019 PMID: 31525055 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b03088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189