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Alkaline-Earth Chalcogenide Nanocrystals: Solution-Phase Synthesis, Surface Chemistry, and Stability.

Alison N RothYunhua ChenMarquix A S AdamsonEunbyeol GiMolly WagnerAaron J RossiniJavier Vela
Published in: ACS nano (2022)
Increasing demand for effective energy conversion materials and devices has renewed interest in semiconductors comprised of earth-abundant and biocompatible elements. Alkaline-earth sulfides doped with rare earth ions are versatile optical materials. However, relatively little is known about controlling the dimensionality, surface chemistry, and inherent optical properties of the undoped versions of alkaline-earth mono- and polychalcogenides. We describe the colloidal synthesis of alkaline-earth chalcogenide nanocrystals through the reaction of metal carboxylates with carbon disulfide or selenourea. Systematic exploration of the synthetic phase space allows us to tune particle sizes over a wide range using a mixture of commercially available carboxylate precursors. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy confirms the phase purity of the selenide compositions. Surface characterization reveals that bridging carboxylates and amines preferentially terminate the surface of the nanocrystals. While these materials are colloidally stable in the mother solution, the selenides are susceptible to oxidation over time, eventually degrading to selenium metal through polyselenide intermediates. As part of these investigations, we have developed the colloidal syntheses of barium di- and triselenides, two among few reported nanocrystalline alkaline-earth polychalcogenides. Electronic structure calculations reveal that both materials are indirect band gap semiconductors. The colloidal chemistry presented here may enable the synthesis of more complex, multinary chalcogenide materials containing alkaline-earth elements.
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