Capping Ligand Effects on the Amorphous-to-Crystalline Transition of CdSe Nanoparticles
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2008
abstract:
Amorphous CdSe nanoparticles were prepared by a base-catalyzed room-temperature reaction between cadmium
nitrate and selenourea, with dodecanethiol as a capping ligand. The nanoparticle size could be controlled from 1.9
to 3.6 nm by increasing the water concentration in the reaction. When the nanoparticles were heated in a pyridine
suspension, excitonic peaks appeared in the initially featureless optical absorption spectra. By changing the suspension
solvent and the capping ligand and its concentration, it was shown that the dynamic surface exchange between the
ligand and pyridine controls the crystallization process. This phenomenon was interpreted as a surface rigidity effect
imposed by the ligand, whose importance was separately evidenced on the dried nanoparticles by the evolution of
X-ray diffraction patterns and Raman spectra. In particular, both techniques showed that a threshold temperature is
needed before crystallization occurs, and such a threshold was related to ligand desorption. The surface effect was
directly visualized by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy observations of the amorphous particles,
where crystallization under the electron beam was observed to start by the formation of a crystalline nucleus in the
nanoparticle interior and then to extend to the whole structure.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Epifani, MAURO SALVATORE
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