A simple synthesis of high‐quality Cu2O, a material of high interest in optics because of its photon exciton interconversion properties, in the form of nanowires (see Figure for a TEM image) is reported by the authors. Reduction of Cu(OH)2, freshly prepared from CuCl2, with hydrazine hydrate in basic solution in the presence of the surfactant polyethylene glycol (PEG) yields Cu2O nanowires 5–8 nm in diameter and 10–20 nm long.
AlGaAs/GaAs quantum well heterostructures based on core-multishell nanowires exhibit excellent optical properties which are acutely sensitive to structure and morphology. We characterize these heterostructures and observe them to have 3-fold symmetry about the nanowire axis. Using aberration-corrected annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy (ADF-STEM), we measure directly the polarity of the crystal structure and correlate this with the shape and facet orientation of the GaAs core, quantum wells and cap, and the width of radial Al-rich bands. We discuss how the underlying polarity of the crystal structure drives the growth of these heterostructures with a 3-fold symmetry resulting in a nonuniform GaAs quantum well tube and AlGaAs shell. These observations suggest that the AlGaAs growth rate is faster along the ⟨112⟩ B compared to the ⟨112⟩ A directions and/or that there is a polarity driven surface reconstruction generating AlGaAs growth fronts inclined to the {110} planes. In contrast, the observations suggest that the opposite is true for the GaAs growth, with the preferred surface reconstruction plane being parallel to {110} and an apparent faster growth rate along the ⟨112⟩ A. This two-dimensional layer growth of the nanowire multishells strongly depends on the surface energies and surface reconstruction of the facets which are related to the crystal polarity and lead to the 3-fold symmetry observed here.
The electronic properties of thin, nanometer scale GaAs quantum well tubes embedded inside the AlGaAs shell of a GaAs core-multishell nanowire are investigated using optical spectroscopies. Using numerical simulations to model cylindrically and hexagonally symmetric systems, we correlate these electronic properties with structural characterization by aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy of nanowire cross sections. These tubular quantum wells exhibit extremely high quantum efficiency and intense emission for extremely low submicrowatt excitation powers in both photoluminescence and photoluminescence excitation measurements. Numerical calculations of the confined eigenstates suggest that the electrons and holes in their ground states are confined to extremely localized one-dimensional filaments at the corners of the hexagonal structure which extend along the length of the nanowire.
Electron microscopy allows the extraction of multidimensional spatiotemporally correlated structural information of diverse materials down to atomic resolution, which is essential for figuring out their structureproperty relationships. Unfortunately, the high-energy electrons that carry this important information can cause damage by modulating the structures of the materials. This has become a significant problem concerning the recent boost in materials science applications of a wide range of beam-sensitive materials, including metal-organic frameworks, covalent-organic frameworks, organicinorganic hybrid materials, 2D materials, and zeolites. To this end, developing electron microscopy techniques that minimize the electron beam damage for the extraction of intrinsic structural information turns out to be a compelling but challenging need. This article provides a comprehensive review on the revolutionary strategies toward the electron microscopic imaging of beamsensitive materials and associated materials science discoveries, based on the principles of electron-matter interaction and mechanisms of electron beam damage. Finally, perspectives and future trends in this field are put forward. he worked as a postdoctoral fellow and research scientist at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology. His research interests now focus on low-dose electron microscopy and structural elucidation of beam-sensitive materials for applications such as catalysis, gas separation, and energy conversion/storage.
The effects of AlGaAs shell thickness and growth time on the minority carrier lifetime in the GaAs core of GaAs/AlGaAs core-shell nanowires grown by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition are investigated. The carrier lifetime increases with increasing AlGaAs shell thickness up to a certain value as a result of reducing tunneling probability of carriers through the AlGaAs shell, beyond which the carrier lifetime reduces due to the diffusion of Ga-Al and/or impurities across the GaAs/AlGaAs heterointerface. Interdiffusion at the heterointerface is observed directly using high-angle annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy. We achieve room temperature minority carrier lifetimes of 1.9 ns by optimizing the shell growth with the intention of reducing the effect of interdiffusion.
Nanorods of SnO2 have successfully been prepared by calcining precursors that are produced in inverse microemulsions. The water/oil microemulsions used to prepare the precursors form an ideal nanostructural reactor for producing monodispersed nanoparticles, which can then decompose to form SnO2 nanorods (see Figure). The mechanism of formation of the nanorods by nucleation and growth processes is discussed.
We use low-temperature photoluminescence, photoluminescence excitation, and photoluminescence imaging spectroscopy to explore the optical and electronic properties of GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well tube (QWT) heterostructured nanowires (NWs). We find that GaAs QWTs with widths >5 nm have electronic states which are delocalized and continuous along the length of the NW. As the NW QWT width decreases from 5 to 1.5 nm, only a single electron state is bound to the well, and no optical excitations to a confined excited state are present. Simultaneously, narrow emission lines (fwhm < 600 μeV) appear which are localized to single spatial points along the length of the NW. We find that these quantum-dot-like states broaden at higher temperatures and quench at temperatures above 80 K. The lifetimes of these localized states are observed to vary from dot to dot from 160 to 400 ps. The presence of delocalized states and then localized states as the QWTs become more confined suggests both opportunities and challenges for possible incorporation into quantum-confined device structures.
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