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Colloidal Synthesis of Bipolar Off-Stoichiometric Gallium Iron Oxide Spinel-Type Nanocrystals with Near-IR Plasmon Resonance
Author(s) -
Carmine Urso,
Mariam Barawi,
Roberto Gaspari,
Gianluca Sirigu,
Ilka Kriegel,
M. ZavelaniRossi,
Francesco Scotognella,
Michele Manca,
Mirko Prato,
Luca De Trizio,
Liberato Manna
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.6b11063
Subject(s) - gallium , chemistry , stoichiometry , surface plasmon resonance , spinel , doping , plasmon , semiconductor , oxide , nanocrystal , inorganic chemistry , nanotechnology , materials science , nanoparticle , optoelectronics , organic chemistry , metallurgy
We report the colloidal synthesis of ∼5.5 nm inverse spinel-type oxide Ga 2 FeO 4 (GFO) nanocrystals (NCs) with control over the gallium and iron content. As recently theoretically predicted, some classes of spinel-type oxide materials can be intrinsically doped by means of structural disorder and/or change in stoichiometry. Here we show that, indeed, while stoichiometric Ga 2 FeO 4 NCs are intrinsic small bandgap semiconductors, off-stoichiometric GFO NCs, produced under either Fe-rich or Ga-rich conditions, behave as degenerately doped semiconductors. As a consequence of the generation of free carriers, both Fe-rich and Ga-rich GFO NCs exhibit a localized surface plasmon resonance in the near-infrared at ∼1000 nm, as confirmed by our pump-probe absorption measurements. Noteworthy, the photoelectrochemical characterization of our GFO NCs reveal that the majority carriers are holes in Fe-rich samples, and electrons in Ga-rich ones, highlighting the bipolar nature of this material. The behavior of such off-stoichiometric NCs was explained by our density functional theory calculations as follows: the substitution of Ga 3+ by Fe 2+ ions, occurring in Fe-rich conditions, can generate free holes (p-type doping), while the replacement of Fe 2+ by Ga 3+ cations, taking place in Ga-rich samples, produces free electrons (n-type doping). These findings underscore the potential relevance of spinel-type oxides as p-type transparent conductive oxides and as plasmonic semiconductors.

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