| Literature DB >> 36234492 |
Benjamin F P McVey1, Robert A Swain1, Delphine Lagarde1, Wilfried-Solo Ojo1, Kaltoum Bakkouche1,2, Cécile Marcelot3, Bénédicte Warot3, Yann Tison4, Hervé Martinez4,5, Bruno Chaudret1, Céline Nayral1, Fabien Delpech1.
Abstract
II-V semiconductor nanocrystals such as Cd3P2 and Zn3P2 have enormous potential as materials in next-generation optoelectronic devices requiring active optical properties across the visible and infrared range. To date, this potential has been unfulfilled due to their inherent instability with respect to air and moisture. Core-shell system Cd3P2/Zn3P2 is synthesized and studied from structural (morphology, crystallinity, shell diameter), chemical (composition of core, shell, and ligand sphere), and optical perspectives (absorbance, emission-steady state and time resolved, quantum yield, and air stability). The improvements achieved by coating with Zn3P2 are likely due to its identical crystal structure to Cd3P2 (tetragonal), highlighting the key role crystallographic concerns play in creating cutting edge core-shell NCs.Entities:
Keywords: cadmium phosphide; core-shell nanostructure; nanocrystal; nanomaterials; quantum dots; shelling; synthesis; zinc phosphide
Year: 2022 PMID: 36234492 PMCID: PMC9565233 DOI: 10.3390/nano12193364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.719
Scheme 1Scheme detailing the synthesis of a Zn3P2 shell on top of Cd3P2 cores.
Figure 1(a) TEM image of Cd3P2/Zn3P2 core-shell NCs. (b) Histograms of measured NC sizes for Cd3P2 cores and Cd3P2/Zn3P2 core-shell NCs.
Figure 2(a) Absorbance and emission of Cd3P2 cores (blue) and Cd3P2/Zn3P2 (red) core-shell NCs sealed in gas tight cuvettes under an Ar atmosphere. (b) Time-resolved emission spectra of Cd3P2 cores (blue) and Cd3P2/Zn3P2 (red) core-shell NCs (c) and (d) graph showing changes in absorbance and emission maxima of Cd3P2 (blue triangles) and Cd3P2/Zn3P2 (red squares) NCs upon exposure to air over a 16-day period.