Solution Synthesis of Germanium Nanocrystals

Solution Synthesis of Germanium Nanocrystals
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2009
Genre:
ISBN:

A method for providing a route for the synthesis of a Ge(0) nanometer-sized material from. A Ge(II) precursor is dissolved in a ligand heated to a temperature, generally between approximately 100.degree. C. and 400.degree. C., sufficient to thermally reduce the Ge(II) to Ge(0), where the ligand is a compound that can bond to the surface of the germanium nanomaterials to subsequently prevent agglomeration of the nanomaterials. The ligand encapsulates the surface of the Ge(0) material to prevent agglomeration. The resulting solution is cooled for handling, with the cooling characteristics useful in controlling the size and size distribution of the Ge(0) materials. The characteristics of the Ge(II) precursor determine whether the Ge(0) materials that result will be nanocrystals or nanowires.

Synthesis and Characterization of Germanium Nanocrystals and Insights Into Their Formation

Synthesis and Characterization of Germanium Nanocrystals and Insights Into Their Formation
Author: Alexandra Lauren Holmes
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN: 9781339543307

Group IV nanomaterials are of interest for a variety of applications that rely on their size dependent characteristics. A fundamental understanding of the optical and electronic properties of these nanomaterials is crucial for application. Recent interest in germanium (Ge) and Ge-based nanomaterials has grown due to advances of size, shape, and compositional control obtained from the reduction of Ge iodides in amine solvents. In Chapter 1 a brief overview of solution-based Ge nanocrystal (NC) synthesis and ligand exchange is provided. The use of microwave irradiation for NC synthesis is discussed. Cyclic voltammetry is introduced as a method to characterize the electronic bandgap of NCs. Chapter 2 discusses the microwave-assisted, solution-based synthesis of Ge NCs. Cyclic voltammetry and optical absorption were used to investigate the absolute band energies of Ge NCs of different sizes and capping ligands. As shown for other NC compositions, the ligand identity plays a role in the electronic properties of the quantum confined Ge NCs. Notably, redox active ligands were utilized to understand how the NC affects the properties of the ligand and vice versa. Chapter 3 investigates the mechanistic role of iodine in the synthesis of Ge NCs and the effect of iodine on the production of Ge NC from either Ge(II) or Ge(IV) iodides is amine solvents. It was demonstrated that iodine mediates size control though the in situ oxidation of Ge(II) iodide. Iodine was also shown to react with Ge(IV) iodide to form Ge NC aggregates. In Chapter 4, disulfides are considered as molecular precursors and as surface ligands. It was shown that there is a change in Ge NC size upon the addition of different disulfides to the reaction of Ge(II) iodide in oleylamine. Additionally, several methods of ligand exchange were tested for passivation of the Ge NC surface with disulfide reagents.

Synthesis and Characterization of Germanium-based Nanocrystals

Synthesis and Characterization of Germanium-based Nanocrystals
Author: Hyun Gyung Kim
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

Approaches to colloidal synthesis have rapidly developed to control the size, shape, and composition of various semiconductors, offering cost reductions, controllability, and scalability. Of semiconductor materials, germanium nanomaterials are known to be the most difficult to synthesize in solution-based methods because of their high crystallization temperature. Zero-dimensional germanium nanocrystals were synthesized by the heat-up method, without any strong reducing agent. Subsequently, finely controlled size-selective precipitation narrowed size distributions, and size-selected nanocrystals successfully created a monolayer germanium nanocrystals superlattice. One-dimensional germanium nanorods were synthesized by the solution–liquid–solid method using tin nanoparticles as seeds. By forming a liquid alloy with the tin seed at the eutectic temperature, which is much lower than the crystallization temperature, germanium nanorods were grown from the tin seed. A monophenylsilane enhanced the yield of germanium nanorods by promoting the phenyl redistribution of diphenylgermane, a germanium precursor. Using a mixture of HCl and HF, tin seeds were completely removed from the tips of the germanium nanorods, leaving germanium crystalline nanorods. Nonvolatile memories, a key component in various electronics and portable systems, include phase-change memory, a leading technology that has seen exponential growth in demand over the last decade. One important class of phase change materials are compounds on the GeTe–Sb2Te3 tie line. Despite interesting properties of the nanomaterials, colloidal synthesis of phase change material nanocrystals has only been rarely reported. In the present study, three representative phase change material nanocrystals, GeTe, Sb2Te3, and Ge2Sb2Te5, were successfully synthesized using the hot-injection method. A poly(vinylpyrrolidinone)–hexadecane (PVP–HDE) polymer was essential for the nanocrystal dispersion and making ternary Ge2Sb2Te5 nanocrystals. Two solvents, oleylamine and trioctylphosphine, were studied for synthesizing all three nanocrystals and reveal the conversion chemistry of phase change material precursors

Colloidal Synthesis and Characterization of Pristine and Compositionally Manipulated Germanium Nanocrystals

Colloidal Synthesis and Characterization of Pristine and Compositionally Manipulated Germanium Nanocrystals
Author: Katayoon Tabatabaei
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN: 9781392664070

A tremendous amount of research efforts were focused on conventional compound semiconductor nanomaterials. Group IV (Si and Ge) semiconducting materials in nanoscale are of significant research interest due to their unique and promising properties in a broad range of technological applications. While during the last two decades, Ge NCs as non-toxic alternatives over metal chalcogenides or group III-V quantum dots were studied by different research group to tune their optical and electronic properties by controlling their size, morphology, surface functionality and composition, still insufficient understanding is at their disposal to design and achieve well-defined and high quality Ge nanostructures for the targeting applications. Nanogermanium is a material that has great potential for technological applications and doped and alloyed Ge nanocrystals (NCs) are actively being considered. The presented work is focused on the microwave-assisted solution-based synthesis of germanium nanocrystals with insights to their formation, manipulating their composition using Group V element and achieving a better understanding of the synthetic chemistry of these materials.Chapter 1 provides an overview of fundamental concepts in the synthesis, nucleation, growth processes, surface chemistry and composition manipulation of NCs and in particular, germanium nanocrystals (Ge NCs). Chapter 2 presents the incorporation of bismuth (Bi), an n-type dopant, within or at the surface of Ge NCs. Bi classically shows no solubility in crystalline Ge. However, Ge could be doped kinetically with Bi in the nanoregime. The first colloidal synthesis in a microwave-assisted solution route and characterization of Bi-doped Ge NCs have been presented. The oleylamine capping ligand can be replaced by dodecanethiol without loss of Bi. A positive correlation between the lattice parameter and the concentration of Bi content (0.5 - 2.0 mol %) has been shown via PXRD and SAED. XPS, TEM, STEM and ICP-MS are consistent with the Bi solubility up to 2 mol %. The NC size increases with increasing amount of bismuth iodide employed in the reaction. Absorption data show that the band gap of the Bi-doped Ge NCs is consistent with the NC size. This work shows that a new element can be doped into Ge NCs via a microwave-assisted route in amounts as high as 1-2 mol % and leads to increased carriers. Colloidal chemistry provides an inroad to new materials not accessible via other means. Chapter 3 discusses a finer control of absolute size and crystallinity that can be achieved by the addition of molecular iodine (I2) and bromine (Br2) to germanium(II) iodide (GeI2). I2 and Br2 are shown to oxidize GeI2 to GeI4 in-situ, providing good control over size and crystallinity. The kinetics of Br2 oxidation of GeI2 are slightly different, but both I2 and Br2 provide size control of the Ge NCs. The samples are highly crystalline as indicated by powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), selected area electron diffraction (SAED), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and Raman spectroscopy. The solutions of I2, GeI2, and colloidal Ge NCs were investigated with Fourier- transform infrared (FTIR) and proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) and showed no evidence for imine, hydrazine, or nitrile formation. Hydrogen and ammonia gases were detected after the reaction by gas chromatography (GC) and high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS). The presence of a germanium amine iodide complex was also confirmed with no evidence for a hydrazine-like species. These results suggest an efficient fine-tuning of size and crystallinity of Ge NCs using halogens in addition to the mixed-valence precursor synthetic protocol previously reported. Chapter 4 considers Bi halide precursors (BiCl3 and BiBr3) along with an organobismuth precursor (Bi(OTf)3 for their impact on size control of Bi-doped Ge NCs. In this work, using Bi halide precursors regardless of halide anion nature alters the NCs size. Higher precursor concentration also results in greater anisotropy in morphology. While BiI3 compared to BiCl3 and BiBr3 provides larger NCs sizes, especially in high concentration regime, all three halide precursors lead to size variation. However, using the organobismuth Bi(OTf)3 as a precursor maintains a relatively constant absolute size of the Ge NCs with low Bi precursor concentrations (0.0-1.0 mol %) and more significant changes can be observed with higher Bi content. The successful incorporation of Bi using Bi(OTf)3 into Ge NCs was determined by elemental mapping performed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM)-energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS). It shows using the organobismuth precursor (Bi(OTf)3) promises to prevent a dramatic change of NCs sizes even when varying precursor concentration which is of paramount importance for many applications requiring a narrow and uniform size regime of doped Ge NCs. Finally, Chapter 5 presents the composition manipulation of Ge NCs, with another n-type group V element, antimony (Sb), a more common dopant for different semiconductor materials. Sb shows negligible solubility in bulk Ge, however, the kinetically controlled colloidal synthesis allows it to be incorporated in Ge or to reside on its surface. Oleylamine (OAm), OAm-trioctylphosphine (TOP)-capped Sb-doped Ge NCs have been synthesized for the first time by a microwave-assisted colloidal route. An enhancement of the lattice parameter of Ge NCs with increasing Sb concentration (0.0-1.0 mol %) is observed by PXRD. An increase in NCs diameters with higher content of SbI3 is shown by TEM. XPS and EDS confirm the presence of Sb before and after removal of OAm, TOP through hydrazine treatment and exchanging the Ge NCs surface with dodecanethiol suggesting either a strong Sb interaction with Ge surface or its incorporation within the lattice. Passivating the Ge surface by a binary ligand system of OAm, TOP results in formation of consistently larger NCs compared to OAm only. The TOP coordination to the Ge surface is confirmed by 31P NMR and SEM-EDS measurement. This Chapter presents successful synthesis of Sb-doped Ge NCs through colloidal chemistry and opens up new pathways to expand the composition chemistry of group IV semiconducting materials.

Solution Sythesis Of Geranium Nanocrystals

Solution Sythesis Of Geranium Nanocrystals
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 22
Release: 2003
Genre:
ISBN:

We present a two-steps synthesis route that yields nanometer size crystalline germanium in the form of a black powder. It relies on high temperature decomposition of tetraethylgermane (TEG) in organic solvents. The presence of pure germanium with diamond structure is unambiguously attested by powder XRD measurements. Low resolution TEM indicates that the particles are between ≈5 to 30 nm in size depending on the synthesis conditions. The as-synthesized Ge powders can be stored in air for months and no oxidation occurs. The Ge powders are sparingly soluble in conventional solvents because Ge nanocrystals are likely embedded in a matrix, composed mainly of C=C, C-C, and C-H bonds. The presence of residual organic by-products impedes probing of the optical properties of the dots. Also, we discuss drawbacks and open challenges in high temperature solution synthesis of Ge nanocrystals that could also be faced in the synthesis of Si nanocrystals. Overall, our results call for a cautious interpretation of reported optical properties of Ge and Si nanocrystals obtained by high temperature solution methods.

Handbook of Emerging Materials for Sustainable Energy

Handbook of Emerging Materials for Sustainable Energy
Author: Naveen V. Kulkarni
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 1034
Release: 2024-02-28
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0323996795

Handbook of Emerging Materials for Sustainable Energy provides a comprehensive accounting on the fundamentals, current developments, challenges and future prospects of emerging materials for the development of sustainable energy. Each chapter addresses a distinct and important area within the energy field and includes comprehensive data to support the materials being presented. Sections cover Batteries, Capacitors and Supercapacitors, Fuel cells, Thermoelectrics, Novel illumination sources and techniques, Photovoltaics & Solar cells, Alternative energy sources, hydrogen as an energy source, including hydrogen production and fuel generation, the use of Biofuels and Carbon dioxide. The book concludes with three chapters related to advanced materials under development for energy conservation and environmental protection, including theories, methodologies and simulations established for advanced materials. Covers a broad scope of advanced materials that have been developed for energy and environmental sustainability Provides detailed and updated information about the structural and functional features of various emerging materials and their multifaceted applications Includes supplementary data alongside each chapter