Alloying is a powerful strategy for tuning the electronic band structure and optical properties of semiconductors. Here, we investigate the thermodynamic stability and excitonic properties of mixed-chalcogen alloys of two-dimensional (2D) hybrid organic-inorganic silver phenylchalcogenides (AgEPh; E = S, Se, Te). Using a variety of structural and optical characterization techniques, we demonstrate that the AgSePh-AgTePh system forms homogeneous alloys (AgSeTePh, 0 ≤ ≤ 1) across all compositions, whereas the AgSPh-AgSePh and AgSPh-AgTePh systems exhibit distinct miscibility gaps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrganic-inorganic hybrid materials present new opportunities for creating low-dimensional structures with unique light-matter interaction. In this work, we report a chemically robust yellow emissive one-dimensional (1D) semiconductor, silver 2,6-difluorophenylselenolate─AgSePhF(2,6), a new member of the broader class of hybrid low-dimensional semiconductors, metal-organic chalcogenolates. While silver phenylselenolate (AgSePh) crystallizes as a two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals semiconductor, introduction of fluorine atoms at the (2,6) position of the phenyl ring induces a structural transition from 2D sheets to 1D chains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSilver phenylselenolate (AgSePh, also known as "mithrene") and silver phenyltellurolate (AgTePh, also known as "tethrene") are two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals semiconductors belonging to an emerging class of hybrid organic-inorganic materials called metal-organic chalcogenolates. Despite having the same crystal structure, AgSePh and AgTePh exhibit a strikingly different excitonic behavior. Whereas AgSePh exhibits narrow, fast luminescence with a minimal Stokes shift, AgTePh exhibits comparatively slow luminescence that is significantly broadened and red-shifted from its absorption minimum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSilver phenylselenolate (AgSePh) is a hybrid organic-inorganic two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor exhibiting narrow blue emission, in-plane anisotropy, and large exciton binding energy. Here, we show that the addition of carefully chosen solvent vapors during the chemical transformation of metallic silver to AgSePh allows for control over the size and orientation of AgSePh crystals. By testing 28 solvent vapors (with different polarities, boiling points, and functional groups), we controlled the resulting crystal size from <200 nm up to a few μm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe use of two-dimensional (2D) materials in next-generation technologies is often limited by small lateral size and/or crystal defects. Here, we introduce a simple chemical strategy to improve the size and overall quality of 2D metal-organic chalcogenolates (MOCs), a new class of hybrid organic-inorganic 2D semiconductors that can exhibit in-plane anisotropy and blue luminescence. By inducing the formation of silver-amine complexes during a solution growth method, we increase the average size of silver phenylselenolate (AgSePh) microcrystals from <5 μm to >1 mm, while simultaneously extending the photoluminescence lifetime and suppressing mid-gap emission.
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