Ligand Steric Profile Tunes the Reactivity of Indium Phosphide Clusters.
Soren F SandenoKyle J SchnitzenbaumerSebastian M KrajewskiRyan A BeckDylan M LaddKelsey R LevineDamara G DaytonMichael F ToneyWerner KaminskyXiaosong LiBrandi M CossairtPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Indium phosphide quantum dots have become an industrially relevant material for solid-state lighting and wide color gamut displays. The synthesis of indium phosphide quantum dots from indium carboxylates and tris(trimethylsilyl)phosphine (P(SiMe 3 ) 3 ) is understood to proceed through the formation of magic-sized clusters, with In 37 P 20 (O 2 CR) 51 being the key isolable intermediate. The reactivity of the In 37 P 20 (O 2 CR) 51 cluster is a vital parameter in controlling the conversion to quantum dots. Herein, we report structural perturbations of In 37 P 20 (O 2 CR) 51 clusters induced by tuning the steric properties of a series of substituted phenylacetate ligands. This approach allows for control over reactivity with P(SiMe 3 ) 3 , where meta-substituents enhance the susceptibility to ligand displacement, and para-substituents hinder phosphine diffusion to the core. Thermolysis studies show that with complete cluster dissolution, steric profile can modulate the nucleation period, resulting in a nanocrystal size dependence on ligand steric profile. The enhanced stability from ligand engineering also allows for the isolation and structural characterization by single-crystal X-ray diffraction of a new III-V magic-sized cluster with the formula In 26 P 13 (O 2 CR) 39 . This intermediate precedes the In 37 P 20 (O 2 CR) 51 cluster on the InP QD reaction coordinate. The physical and electronic structure of this cluster are analyzed, providing new insight into previously unrecognized relationships between II-VI and III-V materials and the discrete growth of III-V cluster intermediates.