We report an electrochemical method for doping two-dimensional (2D) superatomic semiconductor ReSeCl that significantly improves the material's electrical transport while retaining the in-plane and stacking structures. The electrochemical reduction induces the complete dissociation of chloride anions from the surface of each superatomic nanosheet. After the material is dehalogenated, we observe the electrical conductivity () increases by two orders of magnitude while the 3D electron carrier density () increases by three orders of magnitude.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA mixture of ,,'-trisubstituted thiourea and cyclic ,,','-tetrasubstituted selenourea precursors were used to synthesize three monolayer thick CdSSe nanoplatelets in a single synthetic step. The microstructure of the nanoplatelets could be tuned from homogeneous alloys, to graded alloys to core/crown heterostructures depending on the relative conversion reactivity of the sulfur and selenium precursors. UV-visible absorption and photoluminescence spectroscopy and scanning transmission electron microscopy electron energy loss spectroscopy (STEM-EELS) images demonstrate that the elemental distribution is governed by the relative precursor conversion kinetics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe two natural allotropes of carbon, diamond and graphite, are extended networks of sp-hybridized and sp-hybridized atoms, respectively. By mixing different hybridizations and geometries of carbon, one could conceptually construct countless synthetic allotropes. Here we introduce graphullerene, a two-dimensional crystalline polymer of C that bridges the gulf between molecular and extended carbon materials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe area of two-dimensional (2D) materials research would benefit greatly from the development of synthetically tunable van der Waals (vdW) materials. While the bottom-up synthesis of 2D frameworks from nanoscale building blocks holds great promise in this quest, there are many remaining hurdles, including the design of building blocks that reliably produce 2D lattices and the growth of macroscopic crystals that can be exfoliated to produce 2D materials. Here we report the regioselective synthesis of the cluster [-CoSe(CN)(CO)], a "superatomic" building block designed to polymerize and assemble into a 2D cyanometalate lattice whose surfaces are chemically addressable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn atomic solids, substitutional doping of atoms into the lattice of a material to form solid solutions is one of the most powerful approaches to modulating its properties and has led to the discovery of various metal alloys and semiconductors. Herein we have prepared solid solutions in hierarchical solids that are built from atomically precise clusters. Two geometrically similar metal chalcogenide clusters, CoSe(PEt) and CrTe(PEt), were combined as random substitutional mixture, in three different ratios, in a crystal lattice together with fullerenes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a method to control the composition and microstructure of CdSe S nanocrystals by the simultaneous injection of sulfide and selenide precursors into a solution of cadmium oleate and oleic acid at 240 °C. Pairs of substituted thio- and selenoureas were selected from a library of compounds with conversion reaction reactivity exponents ( ) spanning 1.3 × 10 s to 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo-dimensional (2D) materials are commonly prepared by exfoliating bulk layered van der Waals crystals. The creation of synthetic 2D materials from bottom-up methods is an important challenge as their structural flexibility will enable chemists to tune the materials properties. A 2D material was assembled using C as a polymerizable monomer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe controlled introduction of impurities into the crystal lattice of solid-state compounds is a cornerstone of materials science. Intercalation, the insertion of guest atoms, ions or molecules between the atomic layers of a host structure, can produce novel electronic, magnetic and optical properties in many materials. Here we describe an intercalation compound in which the host [CoTe(PPr)][C], formed from the binary assembly of atomically precise molecular clusters, is a superatomic analogue of traditional layered atomic compounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe use micro-Raman spectroscopy to measure the vibrational structure of the atomically precise cadmium selenide quantum dots CdSeXL, CdSeXL, and CdSeXL. These quantum dots have benzoate (X) and n-butylamine (L) ligands and tetrahedral (T) shape with edges that range from 1.7 to 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTraditional atomic van der Waals materials such as graphene, hexagonal boron-nitride, and transition metal dichalcogenides have received widespread attention due to the wealth of unusual physical and chemical behaviors that arise when charges, spins, and vibrations are confined to a plane. Though not as widespread as their atomic counterparts, molecule-based two-dimensional (2D) layered solids offer significant benefits; their structural flexibility will enable the development of materials with tunable properties. Here we describe a layered van der Waals solid self-assembled from a structure-directing building block and C60 fullerene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to realize significant benefits from the assembly of solid-state materials from molecular cluster superatomic building blocks, several criteria must be met. Reproducible syntheses must reliably produce macroscopic amounts of pure material; the cluster-assembled solids must show properties that are more than simply averages of those of the constituent subunits; and rational changes to the chemical structures of the subunits must result in predictable changes in the collective properties of the solid. In this report we show that we can meet these requirements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a detailed study of gaseous Br2 adsorption and charge transfer on graphene, combining in situ Raman spectroscopy and density functional theory (DFT). When graphene is encapsulated by hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) layers on both sides, in a h-BN/graphene/h-BN sandwich structure, it is protected from doping by strongly oxidizing Br2. Graphene supported on only one side by h-BN shows strong hole doping by adsorbed Br2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a solid-state material formed from binary assembly of atomically precise molecular clusters. [Co6Se8(PEt3)6][C60]2 and [Cr6Te8(PEt3)6][C60]2 assembled into a superatomic relative of the cadmium iodide (CdI2) structure type. These solid-state materials showed activated electronic transport with activation energies of 100 to 150 millielectron volts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral recent studies have demonstrated the use of single and few-layer graphene as a substrate for the enhancement of Raman scattering by adsorbed molecules in a method termed graphene-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (GERS). Here we determine the resonance Raman scattering cross-section for the dye molecule rhodamine 6G (R6G) adsorbed on bilayer graphene. For the 1650 cm(-1) R6G mode, we obtain a cross-section of 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe use resonance Raman and optical reflection contrast methods to study charge transfer in 1-10 layer (1L-10L) thick graphene samples on which NO(2) has adsorbed. Electrons transfer from the graphene to NO(2), leaving the graphene layers doped with mobile delocalized holes. Doping follows a Langmuir-type isotherm as a function of NO(2) pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the optical reflectivity and Raman scattering of few layer (L) graphene exposed to K and Rb vapors. Samples many tens of layers thick show the reflectivity and Raman spectra of the stage 1 bulk alkali intercalation compounds (GICs) KC(8) and RbC(8). However, these bulk optical and Raman properties only begin to appear in samples more than about 15 graphene layers thick.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStrong Raman scattering is observed from iodine anions adsorbed at ca. 3% coverage on single layer graphene. In addition, the Raman signal from just one bromine intercalation layer inside three and four layer thick graphenes is observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrafast photolysis of bromoform (CHBr(3)) with a 267 nm pulse of light followed by broadband transient electronic absorption identifies the photoproducts and follows their evolution in both neat bromoform and cyclohexane solutions. In neat bromoform, a species absorbing at 390 nm appears promptly and decays with a time constant of 13 ps as another species absorbing at 495 nm appears. The wavelength and time evolution of the first absorption is consistent with the formation of iso-bromoform (CHBr(2)-Br) by recombination of the fragment radicals within the solvent cage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrafast transient absorption experiments monitor the reaction of CN radicals with 16 different alkane, alcohol, and chloroalkane solutes in CH(2)Cl(2) and with a smaller number of representative solutes in CHCl(3) and CH(3)CCl(3). In these experiments, 267-nm photolysis generates CN radicals, and transient electronic absorption at 400 nm probes their time evolution. A crucial feature of the reactions of CN radicals is their rapid formation of two different types of complexes with the solvent that have different stabilities and reactivities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTime-resolved studies using 100 fs laser pulses generate CN radicals photolytically in solution and probe their subsequent reaction with solvent molecules by monitoring both radical loss and product formation. The experiments follow the CN reactants by transient electronic spectroscopy at 400 nm and monitor the HCN products by transient vibrational spectroscopy near 3.07 microm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dependence of the long-range interactions between molecular hydrogen and iodine monochloride on the geometry between the molecules is investigated. Laser-induced fluorescence and action spectroscopy experiments have identified multiple conformers of the o,p-H2..
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe observe chlorine radical dynamics in solution following two-photon photolysis of the solvent, dichloromethane. In neat CH(2)Cl(2), one-third of the chlorine radicals undergo diffusive geminate recombination, and the rest abstract a hydrogen atom from the solvent with a bimolecular rate constant of (1.35 +/- 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe study the hydrogen abstraction reaction from pentane by chlorine radicals using four different experimental approaches. We use two different solvents (CH2Cl2 and CCl4) and two different chlorine atom sources (photodissociation of dissolved Cl2 and two-photon photolysis of the solvent) to investigate their effects on the recombination and reactivity of the chlorine radical. All four experimental schemes involve direct probing of the transient chlorine population via a charge transfer transition with a solvent molecule.
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