Two-dimensional colloidal halide perovskite nanocrystals are promising materials for light emitting applications. In addition, they can be used as components to create a variety of materials through physical and chemical transformations. Recent studies focused on nanoplatelets that are able to self-assemble and transform on solid substrates. Yet, the mechanism behind the process and the atomic arrangement of their assemblies remain unclear. Here, we present the transformation of self-assembled stacks of CsPbBr3 nanoplatelets in solution, capturing the different stages of the process by keeping the solutions at room temperature and monitoring the nanocrystal morphology over a period of a few months. Using ex-situ transmission electron microscopy and surface analysis, we demonstrate that the transformation mechanism can be understood as oriented attachment, proceeding through the following steps: i) desorption of the ligands from the particles surfaces, causing the merging of nanoplatelet stacks, which first form nanobelts; ii) merging of neighboring
Colloidal quantum dots (QDs) are emerging as true candidates for light-emitting diodes with ultrasaturated colors. Here, we combine CdSe/CdS dot-in-rod heterostructures and polar/polyelectrolytic conjugated polymers to demonstrate the first example of fully solution-based quantum dot light-emitting diodes (QD-LEDs) incorporating all-organic injection/transport layers with high brightness, very limited roll-off and external quantum efficiency as high as 6.1%, which is 20 times higher than the record QD-LEDs with all-solution-processed organic interlayers and exceeds by over 200% QD-LEDs embedding vacuum-deposited organic molecules.
Laser-Induced Localized Growth of Methylammonium Lead Halide Perovskite Nano-and Microcrystals on SubstratesStable MAPbBr 3 crystals with different sizes are successfully localized on a flat substrate via laser-induced heating of the liquid precursors. By adjusting the infrared laser parameters, luminescent arrays and photoconductive wires are grown on-site. This technique can be used to guide the writing of other patterns for specific functionalities.
Bright blue-emitting 2D layered perovskites based on single octahedral planes are fabricated with different spacer molecules, and acetone as solvent.
Lead-based halide perovskite nanocrystals are highly luminescent materials, but their sensitivity to humid environments and their biotoxicity are still important challenges to solve. Here, we develop a stepwise approach to encapsulate representative CsPbBr 3 nanocrystals into water-soluble polymer capsules. We show that our protocol can be extended to nanocrystals coated with different ligands, enabling an outstanding high photoluminescence quantum yield of ∼60% that is preserved over two years in capsules dispersed in water. We demonstrate that this on-bench strategy can be implemented on an automated platform with slight modifications, granting access to a faster and more reproducible fabrication process. Also, we reveal that the capsules can be exploited as photoluminescent probes for cell imaging at a dose as low as 0.3 μg Pb /mL that is well below the toxicity threshold for Pb and Cs ions. Our approach contributes to expanding significantly the fields of applications of these luminescent materials including biology and biomedicine.
Colloidal nanocrystals can self-assemble into highly ordered superlattices. Recent studies have focused on changing their morphology by tuning the nanocrystal interactions via ligand-based surface modification for simple particle shapes. Here we demonstrate that this principle is transferable to and even enriched in the case of a class of branched nanocrystals made of a CdSe core and eight CdS pods, so-called octapods. Through careful experimental analysis, we show that the octapods have a heterogeneous ligand distribution, resembling a cone wrapping the individual pods. This induces location-specific interactions that, combined with variation of the pod aspect ratio and ligands, lead to a wide range of planar superlattices assembled at an air–liquid interface. We capture these findings using a simple simulation model, which reveals the necessity of including ligand-based interactions to achieve these superlattices. Our work evidences the sensitivity that ligands offer for the self-assembly of branched nanocrystals, thus opening new routes for metamaterial creation.
The design of efficient electrocatalysts for electrochemical water splitting with minimal amount of precious metal is crucial to attain renewable and sustainable energy conversion. Here, we report the use of a network of CdSe branched colloidal nanocrystals, made of a CdSe core and eight CdSe pods (so-called octapods), able to host on their pods Pt particles, and thus catalyzing water splitting reactions. Thanks to the octapod shape, the resulting Pt-hosting network is mechanically trapped onto carbon nanotube buckypaper, providing mechanically flexible and binder-free electrodes. We found that such hierarchical configuration maximizes the mass activity and the utilization efficiency of Pt for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). At a potential of -0.15 V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode, the Pt/octapod network-based electrodes display a Pt mass activity on the HER of ~166 A mg -1 and ~42 A mg -1 in acidic and alkaline media, respectively. These values correspond to turnover frequencies of ~168 s -1 and ~42 s -1 , respectively, which are in that order 14 and 21 times higher compared to commercially available Pt/C benchmarks. The strong chemical and mechanical interactions between the Pt and the octapod surface, along with pod-aided adhesion of the Pt/octapod network to the buckypaper, result in a long-term durability (>20 h) of the HER-activity in both media. These results experimentally prove that the exploitation of our network of branched nanocrystals hosting Pt particles can circumvent the durability issues of the catalysts while adopting either ultralow Pt loadings or benchmarking carbon-supported Pt nanocrystals. Our work opens up prospects for using porous networks made by branched nanocrystals as catalysts with ultralow amount of noble metals and controlled catalytic properties. nanocrystals 21,22,[23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30]34 or monolayers 31,32 are typically embedded/deposited into/onto appropriate supports, as it is done in benchmark catalysts, such as Vulcan XC-72-supported Pt nanocrystals (Pt/C). These supports are preferably high-surface area and/or electrically conductive scaffolds. 33,35,36 However, Pt nanocrystals/monolayers often suffer from instability caused by Pt dissolution or delamination during the water splitting reactions. 37,38 The preparation of single Pt atom catalysts, e.g., Pt atoms on CeO2, 39 Al2O3, 40 TiN, 41 TiC, 41,42 carbon, 43 MXenes, 22 is challenging since the single Pt atoms tend to coalesce into clusters during the catalyst synthesis and especially during the electrocatalytic processes, 44,45 quickly degrading the theoretical maximum MAPt. 46 Therefore, it is essential to isolate and immobilize Pt atoms and to strengthen the adhesion and chemical stability of the Pt nanocrystals/monolayers, to prevent the aforementioned issues. This is achievable through the Pt localization into/onto the crystal lattice of an hosting matrix/substrate through controlled chemical interactions. 22,[47][48][49][50] The structural mismatch at the Pt/support interface can be exploi...
The self-organization of nanocrystals has proven to be a versatile route to achieve increasingly sophisticated structures of materials, where the shape and properties of individual particles impact the final functionalities. Recent works have addressed this topic by combining various shapes to achieve more complex arrangements of particles than are possible in single-component samples. However, the ability to create intricate architectures over large regions by exploiting the shape of multiply branched nanocrystals to host a second component remains unexplored. Here, we show how the concave shape of a branched nanocrystal, the so-called octapod, is able to anchor a sphere. The two components self-assemble into a locally ordered monolayer consisting of an intercalated square lattice of octapods and spheres, which is reminiscent of the “tic-tac-toe” game. These tic-tac-toe domains form through an interfacial self-assembly that occurs by the dewetting of a hexane layer containing both particle types. By varying the experimental conditions and performing molecular dynamics simulations, we show that the ligands coating the octapods are crucial to the formation of this structure. We find that the tendency of an octapod to form an interlocking-type structure with a second octapod strongly depends on the ligand shell of the pods. Breaking this tendency by ligand exchange allows the octapods to assemble into a more relaxed configuration, which is able to form a lock-and-key-type structure with a sphere, when they have a suitable size ratio. Our findings provide an example of a more versatile use of branched nanocrystals in self-assembled functional materials.
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