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Preparation and characterisation of luminescent alkylated-silicon quantum dots

Authors :
Andrew Houlton
Benjamin R. Horrocks
Lars H. Lie
Mark S. Duerdin
Eimer Tuite
Source :
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry. :183-190
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2002.

Abstract

A colloidal suspension of luminescent silicon particles is produced when porous silicon prepared at high current densities is refluxed in toluene solutions of alkenes under conditions which allow hydrosilation to occur. The alkyl monolayer on the surface of the silicon particles renders the colloid lyophilic and stable against flocculation over the longest times studied in this report (14 days). Luminescent colloids were prepared using 1-octene, 1-undecene and difunctional unsaturated molecules such as dimethoxytrityl-protected undecenol and 1,9-decadiene. The dry silicon powder can be re-suspended in solvents such as toluene, dichloromethane and trichloromethane and these suspensions are also similarly stable against flocculation. Fluorescence spectra of the luminescent colloid show a peak wavelength for the emission at 670 nm. The emission intensity increases monotonically with excitation energy, being weak close to the emission peak, but becomes intense for photon energies greater than ca. 3.3 eV. This is consistent with the luminescent species being an indirect gap semiconductor and the known properties of porous silicon. MALDI-TOF mass spectra of the colloid show a broad band for m / z between 1500 and 3000 Da. Assuming this feature is due to singly charged ions and the bulk density of silicon applies, it sets a lower bound on the silicon particle radius of about 0.7 nm. This value is consistent with the radius range (1.4–1.7 nm) for the silicon core deduced from the emission maximum of the photoluminescence spectrum and published particle size-bandgap correlations.

Details

ISSN :
15726657
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9604b34b48db8460817c49ddcd0cd79c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0022-0728(02)00994-4