Tunable structural and optical properties of CuInS 2 colloidal quantum dots as photovoltaic absorbers.
Shanna-Kay MingRichard A TaylorPaul D McNaughterDavid J LewisMarina A LeontiadouPaul O'BrienPublished in: RSC advances (2021)
Facile phase selective synthesis of CuInS 2 (CIS) nanostructures has been an important pursuit because of the opportunity for tunable optical properties of the phases, and in this respect is investigated by hot-injection colloidal synthesis in this study. Relatively monodispersed colloidal quantum dots (3.8-5.6 nm) of predominantly chalcopyrite structure synthesized at 140, 180 and 210 °C over 60 minutes from copper(ii) hexafluoroacetylacetonate hydrate and indium(iii) diethyldithiocarbamate precursors exhibit temperature-dependent structural variability. The slightly off-stoichiometric quantum dots are copper-deficient in which copper vacancies , indium interstitials , indium-copper anti-sites and surface trapping states are likely implicated in broad photoluminescence emission with short radiative lifetimes, τ 1 , τ 2 , and τ 3 of 1.5-2.1, 7.8-13.9 and 55.2-70.8 ns and particle-size dependent tunable band gaps between 2.25 and 2.32 eV. Further structural and optical tunability ( E g between 2.03 and 2.28 eV) is achieved with possible time-dependent wurtzite to chalcopyrite phase transformation at 180 °C likely involving a dynamic interplay of kinetic and thermodynamic factors.