All-Inorganic Germanium Nanocrystal Films by Cationic Ligand Exchange
Author(s) -
Lance M. Wheeler,
Asa W. Nichols,
Boris D. Chernomordik,
Nicholas C. Anderson,
Matthew C. Beard,
Nathan R. Neale
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b05192
Subject(s) - nanocrystal , germanium , cationic polymerization , ligand (biochemistry) , materials science , nanotechnology , chemistry , chemical engineering , inorganic chemistry , silicon , metallurgy , polymer chemistry , engineering , biochemistry , receptor
We introduce a new paradigm for group IV nanocrystal surface chemistry based on room temperature surface activation that enables ionic ligand exchange. Germanium nanocrystals synthesized in a gas-phase plasma reactor are functionalized with labile, cationic alkylammonium ligands rather than with traditional covalently bound groups. We employ Fourier transform infrared and (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopies to demonstrate the alkylammonium ligands are freely exchanged on the germanium nanocrystal surface with a variety of cationic ligands, including short inorganic ligands such as ammonium and alkali metal cations. This ionic ligand exchange chemistry is used to demonstrate enhanced transport in germanium nanocrystal films following ligand exchange as well as the first photovoltaic device based on an all-inorganic germanium nanocrystal absorber layer cast from solution. This new ligand chemistry should accelerate progress in utilizing germanium and other group IV nanocrystals for optoelectronic applications.
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