The electrochemical behavior of ZnTe and CdTe compound semiconductors dissolved in molten ZnCl(2) and equimolar CdCl(2)-KCl, respectively, was examined. In these melts dissolved Te is present as the divalent telluride anion, Te(2-), which was found able to be converted to elemental metal by electrochemical oxidation at the anode. ZnTe-ZnCl(2) melts were studied at 500 °C by standard electrochemical techniques. On the basis of these results, electrolysis was performed, resulting in the simultaneous extraction of phase-pure liquid Zn at the cathode and phase-pure liquid Te at the anode. This new process, involving the simultaneous deposition of liquid metals at electrodes of opposite polarity, is termed herein as ambipolar electrolysis. A melt consisting of CdTe dissolved in equimolar CdCl(2)-KCl was processed by ambipolar electrolysis, resulting in the production of liquid Cd at the cathode and liquid Te at the anode. Ambipolar electrolysis could enable new approaches to recycling compound semiconductors and semiconductor devices, such as CdTe solar cells.
Thin films of metallic nanowire bundles derived from the Chevrel compound LiMo3Se3 undergo reversible increases of their electrical resistance (up to 70%) upon exposure to vapors of organic solvents (Qi, X. B.; Osterloh, F. E. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127 (21), 7666-7667). Using quartz crystal microbalance measurements with four analytes, we demonstrate here that the temporal and steady-state resistance changes of the films depend on the time following the adsorption and on the number of molecules that adsorb to the nanowire films at a given pressure. The adsorption ability of the films and the corresponding film resistance increase in the row: hexane < THF < ethanol < DMSO, closely following the polarities of the solvents. On average, approximately 10(5) analyte molecules per LiMo3Se3 unit are required to produce a measurable electrical response. Atomic force microscopy scans on nanowire films reveal that analytes deposit on top of the nanowire bundles and cause the films to swell by approximately 6% in volume. The temporal and steady-state resistance data of the LiMo3Se3 chemiresistors can be explained by assuming that coating of the nanowire bundles with analyte molecules reduces the interwire charge transport in the films.
Recycling ZnTe, CdTe, and Other Compound Semiconductors by Ambipolar Electrolysis. -Electrolysis of ZnTe-ZnCl2 melts (500°C) results in the production of phase-pure liquid Zn and liquid Te. This new process, involving the simultaneous deposition of liquid metals at electrodes of opposite polarity, is termed ambipolar electrolysis. Electrolysis of CdTe dissolved in molten equimolar CdCl2-KCl (500°C) results in the deposition of phase-pure liquid Cd at the cathode and liquid Te at the anode. Ambipolar electrolysis could enable new approaches to recycling compound semiconductors and semiconductor devices, such as CdTe solar cells. -(BRADWELL, D. J.; OSSWALD, S.; WEI, W.; BARRIGA, S. A.; CEDER, G.; SADOWAY*, D. R.; J.
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