Litcius/Paper detail

Synthetic Control of Intrinsic Defect Formation in Metal Oxide Nanocrystals Using Dissociated Spectator Metal Salts

Kihoon Kim, Jiwon Yu, Jungchul Noh, Lauren C. Reimnitz, Matthew Chang, Daniel R. Gamelin, Brian A. Korgel, Gyeong S. Hwang, Delia J. Milliron

2022Journal of the American Chemical Society22 citationsDOI

Abstract

Crystallographic defects are essential to the functional properties of semiconductors, controlling everything from conductivity to optical properties and catalytic activity. In nanocrystals, too, defect engineering with extrinsic dopants has been fruitful. Although intrinsic defects like vacancies can be equally useful, synthetic strategies for controlling their generation are comparatively underdeveloped. Here, we show that intrinsic defect concentration can be tuned during the synthesis of colloidal metal oxide nanocrystals by the addition of metal salts. Although not incorporated in the nanocrystals, the metal salts dissociate at high temperatures, promoting the dissociation of carboxylate ligands from metal precursors, leading to the introduction of oxygen vacancies. For example, the concentration of oxygen vacancies can be controlled up to 9% in indium oxide nanocrystals. This method is broadly applicable as we demonstrate by generating intrinsic defects in metal oxide nanocrystals of various morphologies and compositions.

Topics & Concepts

NanocrystalOxideChemistryMetalDopantIndiumDissociation (chemistry)NanotechnologyInorganic chemistryOxygenChemical engineeringMaterials sciencePhysical chemistryDopingOrganic chemistryEngineeringOptoelectronicsZnO doping and propertiesQuantum Dots Synthesis And PropertiesCopper-based nanomaterials and applications