Halide ions cap and stabilize colloidal semiconductor nanocrystal (NC) surfaces allowing for NCs surface interactions that may improve the performance of NC thin film devices such as photo-detectors and/or solar cells. Current ways to introduce halide anions as ligands on surfaces of NCs produced by the hot injection method are based on post-synthetic treatments. In this work we explore the possibility to introduce Cl in the NC ligand shell in situ during the NCs synthesis. With this aim, the effect of 1,2-dichloroethane (DCE) in the synthesis of CdSe rod-like NCs produced under different Cd/Se precursor molar ratios has been studied. We report a double role of DCE depending on the Cd/Se precursor molar ratio (either under excess of cadmium or selenium precursor). According to mass spectrometry (ESI-TOF) and nuclear magnetic resonance ((1)H NMR), under excess of Se precursor (Se dissolved in trioctylphosphine, TOP) conditions at 265 °C ethane-1,2-diylbis(trioctylphosphonium)dichloride is released as a product of the reaction between DCE and TOP. According to XPS studies chlorine gets incorporated into the CdSe ligand shell, promoting re-shaping of rod-like NCs into pyramidal ones. In contrast, under excess Cd precursor (CdO) conditions, DCE reacts with the Cd complex releasing chlorine-containing non-active species which do not trigger NCs re-shaping. The amount of chlorine incorporated into the ligand shell can thus be controlled by properly tuning the Cd/Se precursor molar ratio.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c4nr00431k | DOI Listing |
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