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Mercaptosilane-Passivated CuInS2 Quantum Dots for Luminescence Thermometry and Luminescent Labels Riccardo Marin, Alvise Vivian, Artiom Skripka, Andrea Migliori, Vittorio Morandi, Francesco ENRICHI, Fiorenzo Vetrone, Paola Ceroni, Carmela Aprile, and Patrizia Canton ACS Appl. Nano Mater., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.9b00317 • Publication Date (Web): 01 Apr 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 2, 2019
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ACS Applied Nano Materials
Mercaptosilane-Passivated CuInS2 Quantum Dots for Luminescence Thermometry and Luminescent Labels Riccardo Marin,a,b,† Alvise Vivian,c Artiom Skripka,b Andrea Migliori,d Vittorio Morandi,d Francesco Enrichi,a,e Fiorenzo Vetrone,b,f Paola Ceroni,g Carmela Aprilec and Patrizia Cantona*
a. Department of Molecular Sciences and Nanosystems, Università Ca' Foscari, Venezia, Via Torino 155/B - 30172 Venezia-Mestre, Italy. b. Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique, Centre Énergie, Matériaux,
Télécommunications
(INRS
–
EMT),
Université
du
Québec, 1650 Boul. Lionel-Boulet, Varennes, Québec, J3X 1S2, Canada. c. Unit
of
Nanomaterials
Chemistry,
University
of
Namur,
Department of Chemistry, Rue de Bruxelles 61 – 5000 Namur, Belgium.
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d. CNR-IMM Sezione di Bologna Via P. Gobetti, 101 - 40129 Bologna, Italy. e. Division
of
Materials
Science,
Department
of
Engineering
Sciences and Mathematics, Luleå University of Technology, 971 87 Luleå, Sweden. f. Centre
for
Self-Assembled
Chemical
Structures,
McGill
University, Montréal, Québec, H3A 2K6, Canada. g. Department of Chemistry, “Giacomo Ciamician”, University of Bologna, Via Selmi 2, 40126 Bologna, Italy. †
Present
address:
Department
of
Chemistry
&
Biomolecular
Sciences, University of Ottawa, 10 Marie Curie St., Ottawa (ON) K1N 6N5 (Canada)
KEYWORDS. CuInS2, silane, quantum dots, composites, luminescent films, thiolates, luminescence thermometry
ABSTRACT. Bright and non-toxic quantum dots (QDs) are highly desirable in a variety of applications, from solid-state devices to luminescent probes in assays. However, the processability of these species is often curbed by their surface chemistry, which limits their dispersibility in selected solvents. This renders a surface
modification
step
often
mandatory
to
make
the
QDs
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compatible with the solvent of interest. Here, we present a new synthetic approach to produce CuInS2 QDs compatible with organic polar solvents and readily usable for the preparation of composite materials.
3-mercaptopropyl
trimethoxysilane
(MPTS)
is
used
simultaneously as solvent, sulfur source, and capping agent for the
QD
synthesis.
The
synthesized
QDs
possessed
a
maximum
photoluminescence quantum yield around 6% - reaching approximately 55% after growing a ZnS shell. The partial condensation of MPTS molecules on the surface of QDs was probed by solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance, whose results were used to interpret the interaction of the QDs with different solvents. To prove the versatility of the developed QDs – imparted by the thiolated silane molecules
–
we
prepared
via
straightforward
procedure
two
nanocomposites of practical interest: (i) silica nanoparticles decorated with QDs and (ii) an inexpensive polymeric film with embedded
QDs.
We
further
demonstrate
the
potential
of
this
composite film as a luminescence thermometer operational over a broad
temperature interval, with relative thermal sensitivity
above 1% K-1 in the range of biological interest.
INTRODUCTION Quantum dots (QDs) are amongst the most intensively studied classes of luminescent nanomaterials over the last decades, and the capability of tailoring their optical properties has reached
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a high level of sophistication.1-2 Although this holds true for heavy metal-based binary semiconductors (e.g. CdSe, CdTe, PbS, etc.),1-2
the
development
of
heavy
metal-free
QDs
exhibiting
equally good optical properties and the same degree of optical and chemical tunability remains a challenge to overcome. Although commonly used as a harvesting material in solar cells,3-4 copper
indium
sulfide
(CIS)
has
recently
gained
increasing
attention within the QD community.5-7 The interest in the field of ternary QDs (and CIS in particular) experienced as of late is justified by the possibility of avoiding the use of heavy metalbased materials in QD-based applications (LEDs,8-9 photovoltaics,1011
and biomedicine12-13 to name some). This perspective is at the
heart of why groups are putting significant efforts on the side of materials engineering (i.e. optimization of composition, surface chemistry and synthesis method) as well as the study of the fundamental electronic properties of this class of QDs. With regards to the first aspect, important advancements have been
achieved
in
terms
of
producing
CIS
QDs
with
high
photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY),14-15 whose emission can be also conveniently tuned over a broad range of wavelengths. This optical flexibility is achieved via alloying,16-17 cation-exchange1819
and growth of passivating shells composed of large band gap
semiconductor materials.20-21 However, most of the synthesis methods developed to produce high quality ternary QDs rely on the use of
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hydrophobic capping agents, leading to materials dispersible only in non-polar solvents. Hence, the immediate applicability of the QDs in polar organic environments is curbed. An important goal in the field is to obtain CIS QDs that are readily dispersible in the solvent of choice depending on the specific application sought after. Usually, QDs are transferred between different solvents via a post-synthesis surface modification7, partial
loss
of
the
primary
PLQY.
22
with the drawback of a
Alternatively,
specific
molecules are introduced directly in the reaction environment. These species remain bound to the QD surface at the end of the synthesis, imparting compatibility with the desired solvents.23 The assessment of the suitable molecules to be employed in the synthesis is not a trivial task, since it is also necessary to achieve good control over the reactivity of two different elements, Cu+ and In3+, displaying respectively soft and hard Lewis acid behavior.24 Albeit the challenges, this approach is able to deliver a ready-to-use system that does not require further modification steps. Given the technological relevance of CIS QDs and their relatively
recent
history,
there
is
plenty
of
room
for
the
development of new synthesis methods and improvement of preexisting
ones,
along
with
the
exploration
of
their
possible
applications. In this study, we present a method to synthesize CIS QDs readily dispersible in a variety of solvents (including polar organic media
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such as acetone), which are further shown to be suitable for the preparation thermometry. precursor
of We
nanocomposites accomplished
(3-mercaptopropyl
and this
for
use
using
a
trimethoxysilane
in
luminescence
thiolated -
MPTS)
silica as
the
passivating molecule. A couple of studies have demonstrated the possibility of obtaining MPTS-capped binary and ternary QDs via a post-synthesis ligand exchange process.25-26 Nonetheless, the Scheme 1. Synthesis of the MPTS-passivated CuInS2 QDs (top) and their use in the preparation of two nanocomposites (bottom left – luminescent polymeric film for luminescence thermometry; bottom right – silica nanoparticles decorated with QDs).
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production of luminescent CuInS2 QDs using MPTS simultaneously as solvent, capping agent, and sulfur source is yet to be reported. We
obtained
sols
of the
prepared QDs
in solvents
displaying
different polarities, while the growth of a ZnS shell allowed to increase the QDs’ PLQY by almost one order of magnitude, reaching 55%. The possibility of utilizing these QDs in different contexts of practical interest was demonstrated preparing two different nanocomposites (Scheme 1): (i) silica nanoparticles decorated with the synthesized CIS QDs and (ii) a luminescent polymeric film in
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which the QDs were embedded. Specifically, this last nanocomposite film
was
explored
as
luminescence
thermometer
over
a
broad
temperature range. EXPERIMENTAL SECTION Chemicals Copper bromide (CuBr, 98%), indium acetate (In(OAc)3, 99.999%), zinc acetate (Zn(OAc)3, 99.99%), 3-mercaptopropyl trimethoxysilane (MPTS,
95%),
chloroform
(CLF,
>99%),
acetone
(99.5%),
tetraethoxysilane (TEOS, 98%), and polyethylene glycol thiol MW 500 (PEG-SH) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. Ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH, 28%) and ethanol (99.8%) were purchased from Fluka. All chemicals
were
of
chemical
grade
and
used
without
further
purification.
QD synthesis Synthesis of MPTS-passivated CIS QDs (core) CIS QDs were prepared mixing the precursor salts (0.2 mmol –28.7 mg– of CuBr and 0.2 mmol –58.4 mg– of In(OAc)3) with MPTS (5 mL) at room temperature. Then, the temperature was raised to 120 °C and the reaction mixture was kept under stirring for 15 min in order to allow the complete dissolution of the salts under N2. The solution
became
clear
and
slightly
yellow.
Afterwards,
the
reaction mixture was heated to the target temperature (180, 190, or 200 °C, as measured inside the reaction mixture) within 30 min.
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For all the syntheses, the timing was initiated as soon as the temperature inside the flask reached 180 °C, at which point the solution started becoming more intense in color. The solution color changed progressively from yellow to orange, then red, and finally brown. Aliquots were removed at predetermined time intervals of 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, and 300 min. After 360 min, the flask was quenched in cold water. The samples were purified by dispersing the QDs in chloroform and subsequently precipitating them with ethanol. After collecting QDs by means of centrifugation, they were re-dispersed in chloroform or in an organic solvent such as acetone, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), or tetrahydrofuran (THF). The samples were named according to their reaction temperatures as C180, C190, and C200. A synthesis at 210 °C was also attempted; however,
the
obtained
QDs
featured
poor
colloidal
stability,
likely due to the use of a temperature very close to the boiling point of MPTS, which might have favored the decomposition of the molecules.
Synthesis of CIS/ZnS QDs (core/shell) The epitaxial growth of a ZnS passivating shell was performed as a one-pot reaction. Parent CIS core QDs were synthesized according to the procedure described above for C200. After 360 min of reaction, a small aliquot was sampled, to compare the properties of core and core/shell architectures, and 0.8 mmol –146.8 mg– of
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Zn(OAc)2 was swiftly added to the flask. Upon addition of the salt, the reaction mixture become lighter in color. Aliquots were sampled at 5, 10, 20, and 30 min. After 45 min, the heating was stopped and the flask quenched in cold water. The sample was purified by dispersing the QDs in chloroform and subsequently precipitating them
with
ethanol.
After
collecting
the
QDs
by
means
of
centrifugation, they were re-dispersed in chloroform or acetone.
Preparation of CIS QDs composites QDs-decorated silica nanoparticles. Silica nanoparticles (SNPs) were synthesized according to a modified Stöber method.27 Briefly, 14 mL of ethanol, 0.35 mL of NH4OH and 1.5 mL of water was mixed at room temperature in a 50 mL round-bottomed flask. After 10 min of stirring, 0.76 mL of TEOS was added dropwise. The mixture started becoming milky after few hours and was stirred overnight. The obtained SNPs were collected by means of centrifugation (10000 rpm for 30 min) and washed twice with a mixture of water and ethanol (1:1) and once with pure ethanol. The product was redispersed in 10 mL of ethanol for further characterization and modification. For the SNPs decoration, 1 mL of crude synthesized QDs’ sol was purified
according
to
the
procedure
outlined
above
and
the
particles were dispersed in 1 mL of chloroform. Concurrently, 1 mL of SNPs in ethanol was precipitated and re-dispersed in 3 mL of
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chloroform. QDs and SNPs were mixed in a 50 mL three neck roundbottomed flask and diluted to 10 mL with chloroform. The mixture was heated to 60 °C and stirred overnight. The SNP-QD composites were
centrifuged
(10000
rpm
for
30
min),
washed
twice
with
chloroform and once with ethanol before being re-dispersed in 5 mL of water. A 2.5 mL aliquot was transferred to a 3 mL glass vial and stirred with 8 mg of PEG-SH for 45 min. The particles were centrifuged (10000 rpm for 30 min) and re-dispersed in 2.5 mL of water.
Luminescent polymeric film. To prepare an inexpensive polymeric film readily applicable for contactless luminescence thermometry, 200 μL of crude CIS QDs’ sol was purified and re-dispersed in 200 μL of chloroform. The sol was mixed with 400 μL of store-bought transparent nail polish, vortexed for 30 s and 20 μL of the mixture was cast on a copper sample holder. The nail polish was allowed to set and dry overnight before performing luminescence thermometry measurements.
Characterization Structure, morphology, and composition The microstructure of the samples was investigated by means of X-Ray Powder Diffraction (XRPD) using a Philips diffractometer with a PW 1319 goniometer with Bragg-Brentano geometry, connected
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to a highly-stabilized generator (40 kV). A focusing graphite monochromator
and
discriminator
were
a
proportional used,
counter
employing
a
with
a
pulse-height
nickel-filtered
Cu
K
radiation and a step-by-step technique (steps of 0.05° in 2 θ ), with a collection time of 10 sec/step. Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectra were recorded with a NEXUS-FT-IR
instrument
implementing
a
Nicolet
AVATAR
Diffuse
Reflectance accessory, using a resolution of 1 cm-1 and averaging the spectrum 56 times. The chemical composition of the samples was studied by means of inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS)
measurements,
utilizing
a
PerkinElmer
Elan
6100
instrument. The samples were weighed and digested with a solution of 3 mL H2O, 3 mL aqua regia (HNO3:HCl = 1:3), and 1.5 mL HF (NOTE: HF is a dangerous chemical and care has to be exercised during its handling wearing proper gear and operating under a fume hood). The mixture was subjected to two microwave digestion cycles (CEM discover SPD). After the first cycle, 7.5 mL H2BO4 was added to neutralize HF. The solution was eventually filtered and diluted to 1:5 with a 2%aq HNO3. Cu+ and In3+ were quantified monitoring Cu (63 and 65 m/z) and In (115 m/z) channels. Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy (STEM) was performed with a FEI Tecnai F20 instrument, equipped with a Schottky emitter and operated at 200 keV in High Angle Annular Dark Field (HAADF) mode. Energy Dispersive Spectrometry (EDS) analysis was performed
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by means of a Si-Li EDAX Phoenix spectrometer equipped with an ultra-thin window detector. JEOL JEM3010 Transmission Electron Microscope operating at 300 kV was used to acquire High Resolution Electron Microscopy (HRTEM) images and diffraction patterns from individual nanoparticles by means of the Nano Beam Diffraction (NBD) mode; a beam diameter of 5 nm was used with the smallest condenser aperture. The diffraction patterns were indexed like a Selected Area Diffraction (SAD) pattern.28 The surface chemical composition was investigated by means of Xray
Photoelectron
Spectroscopy
(XPS),
using
a
PHI
5600-ci
spectrometer (Physical Electronics, Eden Prairie, MN). The main XPS chamber was maintained at a base pressure below 8·10-9 Torr. A standard aluminum X-ray source (Al K = 1486.6 eV) was used to record the survey spectra (1400-0 eV, 10 min) and a standard magnesium
source
was
used
for
high-resolution
spectra,
both
without charge neutralization. The detection angle was set at 45° with respect to the normal of the surface and the analyzed area was 0.05 cm2. The
29Si
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of the sample
C200 was recorded at room temperature on a Bruker Avance-500 spectrometer operating at 11.7 T (99.3MH for
29Si)
using a 4 mm CP-
MAS Bruker probe. The sample was packed in a 4 mm zirconia rotor and
measured
with
a
spinning
frequency
of
8000
Hz.
Direct
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Excitation Magic Angle Spinning (DE-MAS)
29Si
Page 14 of 51
spectra were recorded
using the following acquisition parameters: 60 s relaxation delay, 3
µs
(90°)
excitation
pulse,
52
ms
acquisition
time.
Cross
Polarization Magic Angle Spinning (CP-MAS) spectra were recorded using a 5 s relaxation delay and 5 ms contact time. The processing comprised exponential multiplication of the free induction decay (FID) with a line broadening factor (lb) of 30 Hz, zero-filling, Fourier transform, phase and baseline corrections. The chemical shifts were calibrated with respect to tetramethylsilane (0 ppm). 13C
The
NMR spectrum of the sample C200 was recorded using the
abovementioned setup at a spinning frequency of 8000 Hz. CP-MAS spectra were recorded using a 5 s relaxation delay and 2 ms contact time. The processing comprised exponential multiplication of the FID with a lb of 30 Hz, zero-filling, Fourier transform, phase and baseline corrections. The chemical shifts were calibrated with respect to Adamantane (29.45 and 38.48 ppm). For comparison, the 13C
DE NMR and
29Si
DE NMR spectra of MPTS were recorded under
static conditions filling the rotor with the pure liquid precursor. Optical properties The aliquots sampled during the core and core/shell QDs growth were
dispersed
in
acetone
or
chloroform
without
further
purification prior to optical analyses. Photoluminescence
(PL)
measurements
were
performed
using
a
Horiba-Jobin Yvon Fluorolog 3-21 spectrofluorimeter. A Xenon arc
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lamp (450 W) was used as a continuous-spectrum source to record the PL spectra, selecting the excitation wavelength with a double Czerny-Turner monochromator. The spectra were recorded with 1 nm band pass resolution at room temperature, diluting the QDs to an optical density below 0.1 at the excitation wavelength (390 nm) in order to minimize self-absorption phenomena. Lifetime setups.
(LT)
The
measurements
different
were
core
CIS
conducted QDs
were
on
two
measured
different at
room
temperature under excitation at 373 nm using a NanoLed light source. The detection system consisted of an iHR300 single grating monochromator coupled to a R928 Hamamatsu photomultiplier tube (time resolution with the employed setup of approximately 200 ps). For the study of the core/shell system, emission intensity decay curves were obtained with an Edinburgh FLS920 spectrofluorimeter equipped with a Hamamatsu H 73-04 phototube and a TCC900 card for data
acquisition
in
time-correlated
single-photon
counting
experiments by using a PicoQuant LDH-P-C-405 pulsed diode laser as an excitation source (time resolution with the employed setup of approximately 200 ps). All the decay curves were fit with triexponential functions and the average lifetime was obtained as the weighted average of the three lifetime components according to the equation: 3
𝑟=
∑1𝑎𝑖𝜏𝑖 3
∑1𝑎𝑖
Eq. 1
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The
absorption
spectra
were
Page 16 of 51
recorded
on
a
UV
Agilent
8453
spectrophotometer. The spectra were recorded in the 300-1000 nm range with a 1 nm resolution. The PLQY was measured using an aqueous solution of Ru(bpy)3Cl2 as a standard (emission peak: 613 nm, PLQY = 0.042 ± 0.002).29 Luminescence thermometry measurements of polymer film + QDs composite were performed using an in-house experimental set-up. The spectra were recorded with a Horiba Scientific Symphony Silicon CCD Detector 1024x256 (Horiba, New Jersey, USA) exciting the sample with a 405 nm 200 mW InGaN/GaN quantum well diode laser (Dragon Lasers, China) and focusing the excitation beam on the sample with a 10 cm-focus UV-fused silica concave lens. The temperature was lowered to 77 K and gradually increased to 340 K. For each step, upon
reaching
the
target
guarantee
thermal
collected
epifluorescently
temperature,
stabilization.
The
through
5 PL
the
min
were
emission same
waited signal
lens
and
to was the
excitation light was filtered off using a long-pass filter (> 535 nm – Thorlabs, USA). The spectra at each temperature were acquired in triplicate over two independent cycles.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Structural, morphological, and chemical characterization of core CIS QDs
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We report the characterization of the core CIS QD sample - C200 - reacted for 360 min, which is representative of the entire library
of
CIS
QDs
studied.
The
particles
had
a
tetragonal
chalcopyrite crystalline structure (I-42d - PDF #00-047-1372), as confirmed by their diffractogram (Figure 1A) and the NBD analysis (Figure 1B). STEM observations provided additional evidence
Figure 1. Characterization of the core CIS QD sample C200, obtained after 360 min of reaction. XRPD pattern of the QDs along with the reference pattern for the chalcopyrite structure (A). NBD performed on an area where few NPs where present, the presence of spots confirms the crystalline nature of the QDs and their distances correspond to the {024} (red *) and {112} (white *) family planes of chalcopyrite (B). STEM image (C) along with size distribution (mean size of 2.2 nm – bottom inset in C) and representation of the tetrahedral habitus of the QDs (upper inset in C) – characteristic of the chalcopyrite polymorph. EDS spectrum (D) obtained from the area in C showing the expected
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signals from the elements present in the QD core (Cu, In, S) along with the strong signals from MPTS (Si, C, O, and S). The signal from nickel (Ni), coming from the grid, overlaps with that of copper. XPS survey spectrum of C200 (E). ssNMR spectra of C200 (red line) along with that of pure MPTS (black line) (F).
for the assignment of the crystalline phase, since the QDs have a tetrahedral
morphology
(Figure
1C),
which
is
typical
of
QDs
crystallized in the chalcopyrite polymorph.30-31 The mean size of the QDs, obtained considering the edge of the observed tetrahedra, was 2.2 ± 0.3 nm (inset in Figure 1C). The presence of a thick layer of MPTS molecules around the QDs contributed as a background to the HRTEM images significantly reducing the signal-to-noise ratio, thus preventing the direct observation of the lattice planes of QDs. For this reason, the crystallinity of single QDs have been verified by means of NBD that allows to obtain diffraction patterns from single nanoparticles. EDS measurements (Figure 1D), as well as XPS analysis (Figure 1E and S1), returned all the expected elements (Cu, In, S, and Si). The atomic composition obtained from the XPS spectra – rich in C, O, and S – again suggested a considerable presence of MPTS molecules on the surface of QDs compared to the metals (In and Cu). These MPTS molecules remained tethered to the QD surface after the reaction, imparting colloidal stability.
In
the
FTIR
spectrum
of
C200
(Figure
S2),
the
characteristic vibrations of MPTS molecules could be observed thus
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confirming the presence of these molecules on the QD surface. The broad vibration above 3200 cm-1 arose from OH stretching and was related to the presence of silanol groups on the QD surface, due to the hydrolysis of silane molecules. These OH groups could condense during the thermal treatment with consequent formation of Si-O-Si bridges, as confirmed from
29Si
ssNMR (Figure 1F). This
analysis revealed the presence of a combination of signals centered at -67.3, -58.2 and -48.8 ppm, which were assigned to -CH2-Si(OSi)3 (T3), -CH2-Si(OSi)2(OH) (T2) and -CH2-Si(OSi)(OH)2 (T1) species, respectively. The absence of T0 contributions (usually found around -40 ppm), which would correspond to uncondensed MPTS precursor, clearly indicated the occurrence of condensation phenomena at the 13C
surface of the QDs. signals
ascribed
to
ssNMR measurements showed patterns of MPTS-related
compounds,
along
with
contributions likely from other species formed in situ via thermal decomposition
of
the
precursors
(Figure
S3).
Finally,
ICP-MS
measurements revealed that C200 was heavily copper-deficient with a Cu-to-In ratio of 0.49 (similarly C180 and C190 featured a Cu/In ratio of 0.52 and 0.47, respectively). These results suggested a stronger
reactivity
of
In3+
in
the
reaction
environment,
in
accordance with the poor affinity of thiol ligands (soft Lewis
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bases) with In3+ ions (hard Lewis acid), ultimately leading to
Figure 2. Steady-state optical characterization of CIS QDs. Absorption spectra (A and C), corresponding Tauc plots (insets in A and C), and emission spectra (B and D) of QDs obtained varying the reaction time (Treaction = 200 °C – C200) and temperature (treaction = 360 min). In the inset of B, a colloid of C200 in acetone under UV excitation (approx. 365 nm) shows intense red luminescence. Dashed grey lines in the insets in A and C are linear fits to the Tauc plots.
an imbalanced availability of the two cations. However, it is possible that some unreacted reagents – that were not completely washed
out
–
stoichiometry.
contributed
to
The
deficiency
copper
the
determination of
these
of
the
QD
samples
is
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desirable, since such composition is known to lead to a brighter QDs compared to their stoichiometric counterparts.9,
32
Optical characterization The absorption spectra of C200 core CIS QDs showed multiple weak features (Figure 2A and 2C) and a band gap far below the tabulated value
(815
nm)
of
the
bulk
material.33 This
latter
evidence
indicated the existence of a strong quantum confinement regime, as expected from the small size of QDs. The emission profiles were asymmetrical and rather broad, with a full width at half maximum (FWHM) of approximately 120-130 nm (Figure 2B and 2D). The PL peaks were centered between 650-680 nm, with a large Stokes shift (up to approximately
90
nm).
characterize CIS QDs.21,
Altogether, 34
these
features
usually
Both an increase of the reaction time
and temperature led to a shift of the absorption onset towards longer wavelengths, due to the growth of the QDs yielding a band gap narrowing. The use of the Tauc approach35 allowed following quantitatively the band gap variation (insets in Figure 2A and 2C). The obtained band gap values were used to indirectly determine the
QD
size
according
to
the
effective
mass
approximation,6
obtaining values well in accordance with TEM observations (Table S2). LT measurements showed a PL decay rate in the hundreds of nanoseconds range (Figure 3 and Table 1). In particular, a higher reaction temperature corresponded to a slower PL decay (Figure
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3A). Usually, LT and PLQY are directly correlated. Indeed, we observed that a longer reaction time corresponded to a higher emission efficiency of the QDs (see Table 1).36 Such correlation stems from the fact that poorly crystallized and smaller QDs feature higher defect density and larger surface-to-volume ratio, resulting in a large number of trap states for the charge carriers. This characteristic leads to a higher probability of non-radiative decay events, which are responsible for the mean luminescence LT decrease and the PL emission quenching. Size polydispersion and inhomogeneity
of
the
recombination
centers31
play
a
role
in
determining the non-monoexponential photoluminescence decay, with surface faster
trap-related components
of
emission the
mechanisms
kinetics.37-38
contributing
Due
to
these
to
the
reasons,
assignation of specific lifetime
Figure 3. PL decay curves for QDs obtained after 360 min of reaction at different temperatures (monitoring the emission at the PL peak maximum – A), and specifically for the sample C200 monitored throughout the emission profile
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(B). Inset in A shows a zoom-in of the decay curves at short times. Inset in B shows the PL emission profile of the investigated sample.
Table 1. Results of the decay curve fits and PLQY of the QDs. The decays were monitored at the maximum of the emission profile for the batches synthesized at different temperatures. The monitored wavelength scan was performed on the sample C200. Each average lifetime was obtained according to Equation 1. The PLQY was calculated comparing the QD emission with that of the standard Ru(bpy)3Cl2 (emission peak: 613 nm, PLQY = 0.042±0.002). The relative error associated to the average lifetime values is approximately 1%, as obtained from the fitting procedure of the decay curves. The coefficient of determination (R2) was at least 0.999 for all fitting curves.
Sample
, ns
PLQY, %
83
0.34
Name C180
±
0.02 C190
124
1.50
±
0.08 C200
143
6.7
±
0.3 Wavelength , ns 600 nm
97
660 nm
143
740 nm
213
components to each de-excitation mechanism is not possible. Only the average lifetime value is a meaningful parameter to describe the behavior of the particle ensemble and to compare batch-tobatch
differences.
The
PL
decay
of
C200
was
also
monitored
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throughout the emission profile, observing that the longer the emission
wavelength
Similarly,
the
the
slower
excitation
the
spectra
decay
recorded
rate
(Figure
monitoring
3B).
the
PL
signal of sample C200 throughout its emission profile (Figure S4) showed that the longer the emission wavelength the more red-shifted the exciton peak. This behavior is typical of QDs with a non-sharp size distribution,39 but also heterogeneity in the distribution of defects (i.e.,
emitting centers in
CuInS2 QDs) could
heavily
contribute to this effect.31 Solvent effect The
MPTS-passivated
QDs
were
dispersible
in
solvents
with
different polarity indexes. This characteristic is very appealing when considering their possible application in the framework of device production. After the purification, the QDs were dispersed in chloroform to obtain an optically clear sol. This sol was used to obtain an aqueous dispersion of CTAB-stabilized QDs using a well-established approach.40 Further experiments are ongoing to replace
CTAB
biological possibility
with
another
applications; to
exploit
moiety
also, such
we
that are
cationic
is
more
currently surfactant
amenable
to
testing
the
to
grow
a
mesoporous silica layer around the QDs. The crude reaction product was also easily dispersed in acetone, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and tetrahydrofuran (THF) (Figure 4A). After purification, the colloidal stability of QDs in these solvents is improved upon
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addition
of
mercaptoethanol
(Figure
S5).
The
role
of
mercaptoethanol is considered to be the formation of disulfide bridges with thiol moieties belonging to MPTS
Figure 4. Core CIS QD sample C200 can be dispersed in solvents with different polarities retaining its optical features (A – 20 μL of crude reaction product in 2 mL of different solvents). The absorption and emission profiles of the various colloids under 440 nm excitation are shown in B. The emission peak maximum red-shifts depending on the polarity of the solvent, following the Reichardt’s empirical parameter (C). Color code in B and C is the same.
molecules. In this way, the outer surface of the QDs features an increased
amount
of
hydroxyl
groups
(see
discussion
in
the
Supporting Information). The colloids obtained in the mentioned solvents displayed variable optical emission efficiencies (Figure 4B); water and DMSO more markedly quenched the emission of QDs. Nonetheless, the emission in all the colloids was still detectable. We
also
observed
a
solvatochromic
effect
in
the
different
dispersions, since an increase of the solvent polarity leads to a
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bathochromic shift of the emission of photoluminescent species in dispersion.41 This follows from more efficient solvent-related nonradiative relaxation processes. A parameter that is commonly used to describe the polarity of a solvent is the so-called Reichardt’s polarity
parameter
solvatochromic
ET(30),
properties
of
which the
is dye
estimated
from
the
2,6-diphenyl-4-(2,4,6-
triphenylpyridinium-1-yl)phenolate (betaine 30).42 By plotting the wavelength of the QD PL maximum in the different solvents versus the polarity parameter, we observed a direct dependence between the two quantities (Figure 4C). The good passivation
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Figure 5. Absorption (A) and PL emission (B) spectra of CIS QDs at different stages of ZnS shell growth onto C200 cores. In C, the variation of the PLQY is shown. Decay curves of the parent core (C200) and core/shell QDs after 45 min of shell growth (D). The PL emission spectra and the decay curves were recorded in chloroform under 405 nm excitation. The decay curves were recorded monitoring the signal at the emission profile maximum.
imparted by the MPTS molecules on the surface of the QDs is confirmed by the fact that the PL signal of a QD sol in acetone (in the absence of mercaptoethanol) retained 90% of the initial intensity upon continuous irradiation for 180 min with UV light (Figure S6). Effect of the shell growth The growth of a ZnS shell on core CIS QDs had a huge impact on the optical properties of the QDs (Figure 5). The creation of a CIS/ZnS
architecture
proceeds
according
to
a
partial
cation
exchange process that leads to the presence of an intermediate CuZn-In-S alloyed layer between the
actual
CIS
core
and
the
ZnS
shell.43
This
mechanism
is
responsible for a partial shrinkage of the actual core size that is believed to be the reason for the overall blue-shift of the excitonic
absorption
and
PL
emission
(Figure
5A
and
5B,
respectively).44-45 The formation of the above mentioned alloyed layer might also contribute to this shift (Eg,CIS = 1.5 eV and Eg,ZnS = 3.54 eV). In our sample, this shift was noticeable at the very
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beginning of the shell growth stage and becomes less appreciable upon
extending
the
reaction
time.
The
observed
behavior
is
consistent with a process involving a first step of cation exchange followed by the formation of a thicker ZnS shell that hinders further core etching/alloying. Remarkably, after 45 min of shell growth, the PLQY increases from approximately 6% to about 55% (Figure 5C) with an overall blue-shift of the emission peak maximum of 25 nm. This ten-fold increase in the PLQY stemmed from the shielding of the parent core QDs from the outer environment and the surface passivation, which removed a great part of surface defects responsible for electron trapping.46-47 The fact that the emission of the prepared QDs was influenced by the presence of surface
states
was
confirmed
by
the
decay
curves
recorded
monitoring the PL signal of core and final core/shell CIS QDs (Figure 5D). Notably, the core/shell architecture featured a much slower decay rate compared to core CIS QDs, with a mean lifetime of 273 and 136 ns, respectively. This is due to the partial suppression of the short-lived contribution coming from the nonradiative recombination pathway for which the surface states are responsible. Overall, the ZnS shell growth allows to improve the optical performances system
of
appealing
MPTS-passivated also
for
CIS
QDs,
applications
making
were
the
proposed
brightness
is
a
stringent requirement.
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Nanocomposite systems The C200 core QDs were used to prepare two nanocomposite materials, showcasing the versatility of the developed material. On one side, the presence of thiolated silica precursor molecules on the surface of QDs makes it straightforward to decorate silica-based systems with such photoluminescent moieties. In this specific instance, silica nanoparticles (SNPs) were prepared and simply mixed with QDs
in
chloroform.
Upon
heating
the
mixed
dispersion,
MPTS
molecules underwent condensation on the surface of SNPs yielding QD-decorated SNPs (Figure 6A). The obtained nanocomposite did not display satisfactory colloidal stability in water, with noticeable aggregation over the course of few minutes (Figure S7). This behavior was directly related to the presence of unsaturated thiol groups that imparted hydrophobicity to the system, as discussed in previous
sections.
thiolated
This
polyethylene
impasse
was
overcome
glycol
molecules
in
by
introducing
the
unstable
suspension. These species tethered to the surface of the QDs via disulfide bonds, imparting colloidal stability to the whole system (Figure 6B). The optical properties were retained by the QDs upon blue
light
excitation
(405
nm)
with
a
minimal
shift
of
the
nanocomposite emission compared to the PL of the parent CIS QD sol in chloroform (inset in Figure 6B). The stunning simplicity of
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this approach makes it applicable in the preparation of a variety of luminescent silica-based systems. In the context of biomedical applications, the biocompatibility of nanoparticles – such as magnetic beads,48-49 plasmonic materials50-51 and lanthanide-doped particles52 to name a few – is often increased upon coating them with
silica.
Silanization
is also
a means to
facilitate the
tethering of additional moieties to the particles’ surface to create multifunctional systems.53-54 It is evident that, following the presented method of decoration with QDs, PL properties can be imparted to a virtually infinite variety of systems, thus obtaining desired multifunctional probes.
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Figure 6. Characterization of the nanocomposites. Silica nanoparticles (SNPs) obtained via a modified Stöber approach before and after decoration with MPTSpassivated CIS QDs (A – 50 nm scale bars). (B), suspensions of SNPs and thiolated polyethylene glycol-stabilized SNPs decorated with QDs under daylight (left) and 405 nm excitation (right – image taken with a 500 nm long pass filter). In the inset in B, the normalized spectra of a QD sol in chloroform and the SNPs decorated with QDs suspended in water are presented. (C), Temperature-dependent emission of a polymeric film embedding MPTS-passivated CIS QDs under 405 nm excitation (solid lines) along with exemplary Gaussian curves used for the deconvolution of the signal recorded at 250 K. In the inset in C, the polymeric film under daylight and UV light is shown. Relative thermal sensitivity of the thermometric approach (D) and corresponding thermal parameter (Δ - inset in D) over the investigated temperature range.
Additionally, the compatibility of these MPTS-passivated CIS QDs with polar media gives the opportunity to embed them in polymer matrices. Indeed, we mixed a chloroform sol of the presented CIS QDs with store-bought transparent nail polish. Notoriously, nail polish is composed of nitrocellulose – a highly polar polymer – as the film maker, usually mixed with organic polar solvents such as various acetates (mainly ethyl and butyl acetate) and toluene. The polarity of nitrocellulose, imparted by nitro groups, does not impede the dispersion of MPTS-passivated QDs in this polymeric matrix while retaining their optical properties (Figure S8). This observation opens new possibilities in terms of polymeric matrices
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that can be used for the production of composite devices of practical interest. In
the
frame
luminescent
of
functional
nanoparticles,
systems
the
obtainable
preparation
of
exploiting contactless
luminescence nanothermometers is a field that holds great promise given the achievable sub-micrometric spatial resolution of the temperature
readout.
Not
only
luminescence
thermometry
is
of
interest for biomedical in vivo and in vitro applications55-56 but also for gaining insight in fundamental properties of the matter in the nanoscale realm57-58 and for real-time thermal monitoring of miniaturized electronic devices.59-60 In the two latter contexts, the use of readily available and inexpensive UV/blue excitation light sources does not represent a functional drawback. This holds true also for in vitro bio-applications, as opposed to in vivo biomedical
applications
where
high
penetration
depth
is
a
requirement effectively matched by the use of fully near-infrared light
operating
systems.55,
61
Therefore,
the
inexpensive
luminescent polymeric film, here obtained with CIS QDs, represents an appealing solution to readily perform thermal monitoring. Although temperature-dependent variations of the emission of CIS QDs
have
already
been
observed,62
their
exploitation
in
luminescence thermometry is yet to be reported. Specifically, we performed luminescence thermometry over a broad temperature range exploiting the broadening and red-shift of the nanocomposite’s
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emission profile occurring when passing from 140 to 340 K (Figure 6C). Both spectral variations are suitable to obtain a temperature readout
from
a
luminescent
species.63-64
In
sharply
emitting
lanthanide-based systems, the profile broadening is a convenient parameter to consider for luminescence thermometry.65 However, in QDs the absolute variation of the profile width is small compared to the inherently broad emission. This makes a thermometer based on the profile width poorly sensitive for the proposed system (Figure S9). A better performance in terms of thermal sensitivity was obtained considering the emission spectral shift (Figure 6D). As pointed out by Carlos and co-workers,66 a deconvolution step in the case of signals composed of overlapping components leads to a more
accurate description
of the
profile
and
hence
a higher
sensitivity. In the case under study, the emission profile was deconvoluted using three Gaussian curves centered at 642, 676 and 735 nm. The position of these components was chosen upon fitting the emission profile of the polymeric film at the intermediate temperature of 250 K, and it was kept constant for the rest of the fitting procedures. The thermal parameter (Δ) was obtained as the ratio between the sum of integrated area of the two red-most components (2) + (3), and the one centered at 642 nm (1). This approach was found to be the most convenient among the ones tested to account for the peak shift and in terms of final sensitivity obtained. An accurate mechanistic description of the emission
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based on the attribution of the three components to different emission processes lies beyond the scope of the study. In fact, the deconvolution was merely utilized to reliably account for the red-shift experienced by the embedded QDs’ emission. The variation of Δ depending on the temperature was fitted using a built-in Origin® Boltzmann function and the corresponding relative thermal sensitivity was obtained from the numerical derivative of this function according to the equation:64 𝑆𝑟 =
1∂∆ ∆∂𝑇
Eq. 2
The sensitivity displayed by the system is above 1% K-1 for temperatures higher than 280 K, hence making these particles of particular interest for in vitro luminescence nanothermometry in the temperature range of biological interest. Remarkably, the sensitivity displayed by this system is on par67 or higher68-70 when compared
to
luminescence
the
values
featured
thermometers,
with
by the
state-of-the-art additional
QD-based
advantage
of
avoiding the presence of toxic metals that characterize previously reported systems (lead and cadmium above all). All this considered, the proposed MPTS-passivated QDs represent a system with a great potential for application in a spectrum of fields comprising (but not limited to) fluorescent bio-labels, luminescent
polymeric
films
and
contactless
luminescence
thermometry.
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CONCLUSIONS We
reported
decomposition
the
synthesis
approach
of
involving
CuInS2 the
QDs use
using of
a
thermal
mercaptopropyl
trimethoxysilane (MPTS), which simultaneously plays the role of chelating agent and sulfur source. The obtained QDs have a maximum PLQY of approximately 6%, which can be improved by almost an order of magnitude (55%) upon growing a ZnS shell on the parent CIS QDs core. The PL signal of the proposed MPTS-passivated CIS QDs shows good stability under continuous UV illumination. Notably, the QDs are dispersible in chloroform and in a number of hydrogen-bonding solvents such as acetone, tetrahydrofuran, and dimethyl sulfoxide retaining their characteristic emission. All these features stem from a complex surface chemistry exhibiting MPTS molecules that underwent condensation, thus resulting in a silanated passivating layer featuring siloxane groups. Altogether, said characteristics make these QDs highly flexible, opening new avenues in terms of possible applications that require dispersibility in different media and state-of-the-art optical performance.
We
further
demonstrated
the
versatility
of
this
system by preparing two different nanocomposites, namely CIS QDdecorated silica nanoparticles and a luminescent polymeric film embedding CIS QDs.
The
latter
composite
was
used
to perform
luminescence thermometry over a broad temperature range (140-
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340 K), harnessing the temperature-dependent luminescence of these heavy-metal free QDs.
ASSOCIATED CONTENT Supporting
Information.
characterization
(XPS,
FTIR,
additional ssNMR)
of
C200
physicochemical CIS
QDs;
size
estimation using the effective mass approximation; wavelengthdependent excitation spectra of C200; study of the colloidal and emission stability of C200; additional characterization of the nanocomposites (pictures of the SNPs-QDs composite suspension, absorption spectrum of the luminescent polymeric film, SEM of the polymeric film, thermometric approach based on peak broadening). Corresponding Author * Patrizia Canton,
[email protected] Author Contributions The manuscript was written through contributions of all authors. All authors have given approval to the final version of the manuscript. ACKNOWLEDGMENT The authors thank Dr. Antonio Benayas for the fruitful discussions, Mr. Tiziano Finotto for the XRD measurements, and Mr. Nicolò Mazzucco for the ICP-MS analyses. ADIR 2015 Grant from Ca’ Foscari
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University of Venice is gratefully acknowledged. Prof. Fiorenzo Vetrone
is
grateful
to
the
Natural
Sciences
and
Engineering
Research Council (NSERC) of Canada and the Fonds de recherché du Québec
-
Nature
et
technologies
(FRQNT)
for
supporting
his
research. Artiom Skripka is grateful to FRQNT for financial support in the form of a scholarship for doctoral studies (Bourses de doctorat en rechérche). Dr. Luca Fusaro is acknowledged for his support in the ssNMR measurements; this research used resources of the nuclear magnetic resonance service located at the University of Namur. This service is a member of the “Plateforme Technologique Physico-Chemical Characterization” – PC2
REFERENCES 1. Greytak, A. B.; Allen, P. M.; Liu, W.; Zhao, J.; Young, E. R.; Popovic, Z.; Walker, B.; Nocera, D. G.; Bawendi, M. G. Alternating Layer Addition Approach to CdSe/CdS Core/Shell Quantum Dots with near-Unity Quantum Yield and High on-Time Fractions. Chem. Sci. 2012, 3, 2028-2034. 2. Biju, V.; Itoh, T.; Anas, A.; Sujith, A.; Ishikawa, M. Semiconductor Quantum Dots and Metal Nanoparticles: Syntheses, Optical Properties, and Biological Applications. Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 2008, 391, 2469-2495. 3. Yakushev, M. V.; Mudryi, A. V.; Victorov, I. V.; Krustok, J.; Mellikov, E. Energy of Excitons in CuInS2 Single Crystals. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2006, 88, 011922. 4. Weil, B. D.; Connor, S. T.; Cui, Y. CuInS2 Solar Cells by AirStable Ink Rolling. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 6642-6643. 5. Castro, S. L.; Bailey, S. G.; Raffaelle, R. P.; Banger, K. K.; Hepp, A. F. Nanocrystalline Chalcopyrite Materials (CuInS2 and CuInSe2) Via Low-Temperature Pyrolysis of Molecular Single-Source Precursors. Chem. Mater. 2003, 15, 3142-3147. 6. Zhong, H.; Zhou, Y.; Ye, M.; He, Y.; Ye, J.; He, C.; Yang, C.; Li, Y. Controlled Synthesis and Optical Properties of Colloidal Ternary Chalcogenide CuInS2 Nanocrystals. Chem. Mater. 2008, 20, 6434-6443.
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70. Yang, J. M.; Yang, H.; Lin, L. Quantum Dot Nano Thermometers Reveal Heterogeneous Local Thermogenesis in Living Cells. ACS Nano 2011, 5, 5067-5071.
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Table of Content Artwork
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Scheme 1. Synthesis of the MPTS-passivated CuInS2 QDs (top) and their use in the preparation of two nanocomposites (bottom left – luminescent polymeric film for luminescence thermometry; bottom right – silica nanoparticles decorated with QDs). 216x247mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 1. Characterization of the core CIS QD sample C200, obtained after 360 min of reaction. XRPD pattern of the QDs along with the reference pattern for the chalcopyrite structure (A). NBD performed on an area where few NPs where present, the presence of spots confirms the crystalline nature of the QDs and their distances correspond to the {024} (red *) and {112} (white *) family planes of chalcopyrite (B). STEM image (C) along with size distribution (mean size of 2.2 nm – bottom inset in C) and representation of the tetrahedral habitus of the QDs (upper inset in C) – characteristic of the chalcopyrite polymorph. EDS spectrum (D) obtained from the area in C showing the expected signals from the elements present in the QD core (Cu, In, S) along with the strong signals from MPTS (Si, C, O, and S). The signal from nickel (Ni), coming from the grid, overlaps with that of copper. XPS survey spectrum of C200 (E). ssNMR spectra of C200 (red line) along with that of pure MPTS (black line) (F). 383x230mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 2. Steady-state optical characterization of CIS QDs. Absorption spectra (A and C), corresponding Tauc plots (insets in A and C), and emission spectra (B and D) of QDs obtained varying the reaction time (Treaction = 200 °C – C200) and temperature (treaction = 360 min). In the inset of B, a colloid of C200 in acetone under UV excitation (approx. 365 nm) shows intense red luminescence. Dashed grey lines in the insets in A and C are linear fits to the Tauc plots. 274x196mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 3. PL decay curves for QDs obtained after 360 min of reaction at different temperatures (monitoring the emission at the PL peak maximum – A), and specifically for the sample C200 monitored throughout the emission profile (B). Inset in A shows a zoom-in of the decay curves at short times. Inset in B shows the PL emission profile of the investigated sample. 302x129mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 4. Core CIS QD sample C200 can be dispersed in solvents with different polarities retaining its optical features (A – 20 μL of crude reaction product in 2 mL of different solvents). The absorption and emission profiles of the various colloids under 440 nm excitation are shown in B. The emission peak maximum redshifts depending on the polarity of the solvent, following the Reichardt’s empirical parameter (C). Color code in B and C is the same. 271x104mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 5. Absorption (A) and PL emission (B) spectra of CIS QDs at different stages of ZnS shell growth onto C200 cores. In C, the variation of the PLQY is shown. Decay curves of the parent core (C200) and core/shell QDs after 45 min of shell growth (D). The PL emission spectra and the decay curves were recorded in chloroform under 405 nm excitation. The decay curves were recorded monitoring the signal at the emission profile maximum. 227x198mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 6. Characterization of the nanocomposites. Silica nanoparticles (SNPs) obtained via a modified Stöber approach before and after decoration with MPTS-passivated CIS QDs (A – 50 nm scale bars). (B), suspensions of SNPs and thiolated polyethylene glycol-stabilized SNPs decorated with QDs under daylight (left) and 405 nm excitation (right – image taken with a 500 nm long pass filter). In the inset in B, the normalized spectra of a QD sol in chloroform and the SNPs decorated with QDs suspended in water are presented. (C), Temperature-dependent emission of a polymeric film embedding MPTS-passivated CIS QDs under 405 nm excitation (solid lines) along with exemplary Gaussian curves used for the deconvolution of the signal recorded at 250 K. In the inset in C, the polymeric film under daylight and UV light is shown. Relative thermal sensitivity of the thermometric approach (D) and corresponding thermal parameter (Δ inset in D) over the investigated temperature range. 317x218mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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