Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.134, No.2, 1085-1092, 2012
Ligand Exchange on Colloidal CdSe Nanocrystals Using Thermally Labile tert-Butylthiol for Improved Photocurrent in Nanocrystal Films
As-prepared CdSe nanocrystals were ligand exchanged using tert-butylthiol, which yielded stable CdSe nanocrystal inks in the strong donor solvent tetramethylurea. The efficacy of ligand exchange was probed by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and FT-IR spectroscopy. By studying sequential exchanges of tetradecylphosphonic acid and then tert-butylthiol, TGA and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopic evidence clearly demonstrated that the ligand exchange is essentially quantitative. The resulting tert-butylthiol-exchanged CdSe nanocrystals undergo facile thermal ligand expulsion (<= 200 degrees C), which was studied by TGA-mass spectrometry. Mild thermal treatment of tert-butylthiol-exchanged CdSe nanocrystal films was found to induce loss of quantum confinement (as evidenced by UV-vis spectroscopy) and provided for increased electrochemical photocurrent, electron mobility, and film stability. Pyridine-exchanged CdSe nanocrystals were employed as a control system throughout to demonstrate the beneficial attributes of tert-butylthiol exchange; namely, lower organic content, better colloidal stability, improved interparticle coupling, and vastly increased electrochemical photocurrent response upon illumination.