posted on 2007-08-01, 00:00authored byNarayan Pradhan, Danielle Reifsnyder, Renguo Xie, Jose Aldana, Xiaogang Peng
Amine ligands were identified to bond on the surface of CdSe nanocrystals in a dynamic fashion
under elevated temperatures in the reproducible growth domain of the specific designed growth reactions.
The surface ligand dynamics was found to strongly depend on the growth temperature, the ligand
concentration, and the ligand chain length. The strong chain-length dependence was originated from the
interligand interactions in the ligand monolayer of a nanocrystal, provided fatty amines being weak ligands
for CdSe nanocrystals. When the growth reaction was above the boiling point of an amine ligand, the
surface ligand dynamics was violent, a quasi-gas-phase state, indicated by strong temperature-dependent
and fast growth rates of the nanocrystals. Approximately below its boiling point, a significantly weak
temperature dependence of the growth rate of the nanocrystals associated with the quasi-liquid state of
the surface ligands was observed. A direct result of studying the surface ligand dynamics of this well-established nanocrystal system was the formation of high-quality CdSe nanocrystals under much reduced
temperature, 150 °C, in comparison to the standard 250−350 °C temperature range. This was achieved
by using fatty amines with a short hydrocarbon chain at a low ligand concentration in the solution. Preliminary
results indicate that a similar temperature (160 °C) also worked for the growth of InP nanocrystals.