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1.
ACS Nano ; 18(24): 16051-16058, 2024 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38840340

ABSTRACT

Indium phosphide (InP) quantum dots (QDs) have attracted significant interest as next-generation light-emitting materials. However, the synthesis of blue-emitting InP-based QDs has lagged behind that of established green- and red-emitting InP QDs. Herein, we present a strategy to synthesize blue-emitting QDs by forming an InGaP alloy composition. The introduction of asymmetric In-carboxylate and Ga-carboxylate complexes resulted in a balanced synthetic reactivity between In-P and Ga-P, leading to the formation of InGaP alloyed QDs. The resultant In1-xGaxP alloyed QDs exhibited a broad range of photoluminescence (PL) tunability, spanning from 535 nm (InP) to 465 nm (In0.62Ga0.38P), depending on the In/Ga ratio used in the synthesis. In contrast, synthesis with symmetric In-carboxylate and Ga-carboxylate complexes produced a core/shell structure of InP/GaP QDs, which did not exhibit a blue shift of the PL peak with Ga addition. By employing a core/shell structure of In0.62Ga0.38P/ZnS QDs, we achieved a PL quantum yield of 42% at 475 nm. This work highlights the material-processing strategy essential for forming alloyed structures in III-V ternary systems.

2.
Adv Colloid Interface Sci ; 331: 103245, 2024 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38945073

ABSTRACT

Quantum dots (QDs), a novel category of semiconductor materials, exhibit extraordinary capabilities in tuning optical characteristics. Their emergence in biophotonics has been noteworthy, particularly in bio-imaging, biosensing, and theranostics applications. Although conventional QDs such as PbS, CdSe, CdS, and HgTe have garnered attention for their promising features, the presence of heavy metals in these QDs poses significant challenges for biological use. To address these concerns, the development of Ag chalcogenide QDs has gained prominence owing to their near-infrared emission and exceptionally low toxicity, rendering them suitable for biological applications. This review explores recent advancements in Ag chalcogenide QDs, focusing on their synthesis methodologies, surface chemistry modifications, and wide-ranging applications in biomedicine. Additionally, it identifies future directions in material science, highlighting the potential of these innovative QDs in revolutionizing the field.

3.
Acta Biomater ; 180: 140-153, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38604467

ABSTRACT

Photothermal therapy (PTT) holds great promise as a cancer treatment modality by generating localized heat at the tumor site. Among various photothermal agents, gallium-based liquid metal (LM) has been widely used as a new photothermal-inducible metallic compound due to its structural transformability. To overcome limitations of random aggregation and dissipation of administrated LM particles into a human body, we developed LM-containing injectable composite hydrogel platforms capable of achieving spatiotemporal PTT and chemotherapy. Eutectic gallium-indium LM particles were first stabilized with 1,2-Distearoyl-sn­glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DSPE) lipids. They were then incorporated into an interpenetrating hydrogel network composed of thiolated gelatin conjugated with 6-mercaptopurine (MP) chemodrug and poly(ethylene glycol)-diacrylate. The resulted composite hydrogel exhibited sufficient capability to induce MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell death through a multi-step mechanism: (1) hyperthermic cancer cell death due to temperature elevation by near-infrared laser irradiation via LM particles, (2) leakage of glutathione (GSH) and cleavage of disulfide bonds due to destruction of cancer cells. As a consequence, additional chemotherapy was facilitated by GSH, leading to accelerated release of MP within the tumor microenvironment. The effectiveness of our composite hydrogel system was evaluated both in vitro and in vivo, demonstrating significant tumor suppression and killing. These results demonstrate the potential of this injectable composite hydrogel for spatiotemporal cancer treatment. In conclusion, integration of PTT and chemotherapy within our hydrogel platform offers enhanced therapeutic efficacy, suggesting promising prospects for future clinical applications. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Our research pioneers a breakthrough in cancer treatments by developing an injectable hydrogel platform incorporating liquid metal (LM) particle-mediated photothermal therapy and 6-mercaptopurine (MP)-based chemotherapy. The combination of gallium-based LM and MP achieves synergistic anticancer effects, and our injectable composite hydrogel acts as a localized reservoir for specific delivery of both therapeutic agents. This platform induces a multi-step anticancer mechanism, combining NIR-mediated hyperthermic tumor death and drug release triggered by released glutathione from damaged cancer populations. The synergistic efficacy validated in vitro and in vivo studies highlights significant tumor suppression. This injectable composite hydrogel with synergistic therapeutic efficacy holds immense promise for biomaterial-mediated spatiotemporal treatment of solid tumors, offering a potent targeted therapy for triple negative breast cancers.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms , Gallium , Hydrogels , Hydrogels/chemistry , Gallium/chemistry , Gallium/pharmacology , Humans , Female , Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy , Breast Neoplasms/therapy , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Injections , Phototherapy , Mice, Nude , Mice , Photothermal Therapy , Mice, Inbred BALB C
4.
Chem Sci ; 14(35): 9600-9607, 2023 Sep 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37712040

ABSTRACT

This study presents the development of a ß-hairpin (tryptophan zipper, Trpzip)-based molecular tweezer (MT) that can control the folding and binding of α-helical peptides. When an α-helix isolated from the p53 protein was conjugated with Trpzip in an optimized macrocyclic structure, the folded ß-hairpin stabilized the helix conformation through the side chain-to-side chain stapling strategy, which notably enhanced target (hDM2) affinity of the peptide. On the other hand, the helicity and binding affinity were significantly reduced when the hairpin was unfolded by a redox stimulus. This stimulus-responsive property was translated into the effective capture and release of model multivalent biomaterials, hDM2-gold nanoparticle conjugates. Since numerous protein interactions are mediated by α-helical peptides, these results suggest that the ß-hairpin-based MT holds great potential to be utilized in various biomedical applications, such as protein interaction inhibition and cancer biomarker (e.g., circulating tumor cells and exosomes) detection.

5.
Adv Mater ; 35(28): e2301842, 2023 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37170473

ABSTRACT

III-V colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are promising materials for optoelectronic applications, for they avoid heavy metals while achieving absorption spanning the visible to the infrared (IR). However, the covalent nature of III-V CQDs requires the development of new passivation strategies to fabricate conductive CQD solids for optoelectronics: this work shows herein that ligand exchanges, previously developed in II-VI and IV-VI quantum dots and employing a single ligand, do not fully passivate CQDs, and that this curtails device efficiency. Guided by density functional theory (DFT) simulations, this work develops a co-passivation strategy to fabricate indium arsenide CQD photodetectors, an approach that employs the combination of X-type methyl ammonium acetate (MaAc) and Z-type ligands InBr3 . This approach maintains charge carrier mobility and improves passivation, seen in a 25% decrease in Stokes shift, a fourfold reduction in the rate of first-exciton absorption linewidth broadening over time-under-stress, and leads to a doubling in photoluminescence (PL) lifetime. The resulting devices show 37% external quantum efficiency (EQE) at 950 nm, the highest value reported for InAs CQD photodetectors.


Subject(s)
Quantum Dots , Ligands , Electric Conductivity
6.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 59(19): 2697-2710, 2023 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36751869

ABSTRACT

Quantum dots have attracted significant scientific interest owing to their optoelectronic properties, which are distinct from their bulk counterparts. In order to fully utilize quantum dots for next generation devices with advanced functionalities, it is important to fabricate quantum dot colloids into dry patterns with desired feature sizes and shapes with respect to target applications. In this review, recent progress in ultrahigh-resolution quantum dot patterning technologies will be discussed, with emphasis on the characteristic advantages as well as the limitations of diverse technologies. This will provide guidelines for selecting suitable tools to handle quantum dot colloids throughout the fabrication of quantum dot based solid-state devices. Additionally, epitaxially fabricated single-particle level quantum dot arrays are discussed. These are extreme in terms of pattern resolution, and expand the potential application of quantum dots to quantum information processing.

7.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 12(19)2022 Sep 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36234448

ABSTRACT

The rapid development of electric vehicles has generated a recent demand for high energy density lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). One simple, effective way to enhance energy density of LIBs is to increase the thickness of electrodes. However, the conventional wet process used to fabricate thick electrodes involves the evaporation of large amounts of organic solvents, which causes an inhomogeneous distribution of conductive additives and binders. This weakens the mechanical and electrochemical network between active materials, resulting in poor electrochemical performance and structural degradation. Herein, we introduce a new strategy to produce homogeneous thick electrodes by using a dry, solvent-free process. Instead of using a conventional PVDF (polyvinylidene fluoride) binder, we employed a phenoxy resin as the binder in dry process for the first time. This thermoplastic binder exhibits better ductile properties than PVDF in the way that it generates a uniform network structure that connects the active materials during the hot press process. This enables the production electrochemically stable electrodes without using organic solvents, which record capacity retention rates of 73.5% over 50 cycles at a 40 mg/cm2 of thick electrodes. By contrast, thick electrodes produced with a PVDF binder via wet processing only have a capacity retention rate of 21.8% due to rapid structural degradation.

8.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 12(19)2022 Sep 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36234483

ABSTRACT

Silicon is a promising anode material that can increase the theoretical capacity of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). However, the volume expansion of silicon remains a challenge. In this study, we employed a novel combination of conductive additives to effectively suppress the volume expansion of Si during charging/discharging cycles. Rather than carbon black (CB), which is commonly used in SiO anodes, we introduced single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) as a conductive additive. Owing to their high aspect ratio, CNTs enable effective connection of SiO particles, leading to stable electrochemical operation to prevent volume expansion. In addition, we explored a combination of CB and SWCNTs, with results showing a synergetic effect compared to a single-component of SWCNTs, as small-sized CB particles can enhance the interface contact between the conductive additive and SiO particles, whereas SWCNTs have limited contact points. With this hybrid conductive additive, we achieved a stable operation of full-cell LIBs for more than 200 cycles, with a retention rate of 91.1%, whereas conventional CB showed a 74.0% specific capacity retention rate.

9.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 13(10)2022 Oct 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36296128

ABSTRACT

Indium phosphide (InP) colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) have generated great interest as next-generation light-emitting materials owing to their narrow emission spectra and environment-friendly components. The minimized surface defects is essential to achieve narrow full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) and high photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY). However, InP CQDs are readily oxidized in ambient condition, which results in formation of oxidation defect states on the surface of InP CQDs. Herein, we introduce a strategy to successfully passivate the surface defects of InP core by zinc complexes. The zinc carboxylates passivation reduces FWHM of InP CQDs from 130 nm to 70 nm and increases PLQY from 1% to 14% without shelling. Furthermore, the photoluminescence (PL) peak has shifted from 670 nm to 510 nm with an increase of zinc carboxylates passivation, which suggests that excessive zinc carboxylates functions as a size-regulating reagent in the synthesis.

10.
Adv Mater ; 34(33): e2203039, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35767306

ABSTRACT

Colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are promising materials for infrared (IR) light detection due to their tunable bandgap and their solution processing; however, to date, the time response of CQD IR photodiodes is inferior to that provided by Si and InGaAs. It is reasoned that the high permittivity of II-VI CQDs leads to slow charge extraction due to screening and capacitance, whereas III-Vs-if their surface chemistry can be mastered-offer a low permittivity and thus increase potential for high-speed operation. In initial studies, it is found that the covalent character in indium arsenide (InAs) leads to imbalanced charge transport, the result of unpassivated surfaces, and uncontrolled heavy doping. Surface management using amphoteric ligand coordination is reported, and it is found that the approach addresses simultaneously the In and As surface dangling bonds. The new InAs CQD solids combine high mobility (0.04 cm2 V-1 s-1 ) with a 4× reduction in permittivity compared to PbS CQDs. The resulting photodiodes achieve a response time faster than 2 ns-the fastest photodiode among previously reported CQD photodiodes-combined with an external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 30% at 940 nm.

11.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(38): 15606-15615, 2021 Sep 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34542273

ABSTRACT

Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) based on metal halide perovskite quantum dots (QDs) have achieved impressive external quantum efficiencies; however, the lack of surface protection of QDs, combined with efficiency droop, decreases device operating lifetime at brightnesses of interest. The epitaxial incorporation of QDs within a semiconducting shell provides surface passivation and exciton confinement. Achieving this goal in the case of perovskite QDs remains an unsolved challenge in view of the materials' chemical instability. Here, we report perovskite QDs that remain stable in a thin layer of precursor solution of perovskite, and we use strained QDs as nucleation centers to drive the homogeneous crystallization of a perovskite matrix. Type-I band alignment ensures that the QDs are charge acceptors and radiative emitters. The new materials show suppressed Auger bi-excition recombination and bright luminescence at high excitation (600 W cm-2), whereas control materials exhibit severe bleaching. Primary red LEDs based on the new materials show an external quantum efficiency of 18%, and these retain high performance to brightnesses exceeding 4700 cd m-2. The new materials enable LEDs having an operating half-life of 2400 h at an initial luminance of 100 cd m-2, representing a 100-fold enhancement relative to the best primary red perovskite LEDs.

12.
Nano Lett ; 21(14): 6057-6063, 2021 Jul 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34250796

ABSTRACT

III-V colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are promising semiconducting materials for optoelectronic applications; however, their strong covalent character requires a distinct approach to surface management compared with widely investigated II-VI and IV-VI CQDs-dots, which by contrast are characterized by an ionic nature. Here we show stoichiometric reconstruction in InAs CQDs by ligand exchange. In particular, we find that indium-carboxylate ligands, which passivate as-synthesized InAs CQDs and are responsible for In-rich surfaces, can be replaced by anionic ligands such as thiols. This enables the production of inks consisting of balanced-stoichiomety CQDs; this is distinct from what is observed in II-VI and IV-VI CQDs, in which thiols replace carboxylates. The approach enables the implementation of InAs CQD solids as the active layer in photodiode detectors that exhibit an external quantum efficiency of 36% at 930 nm and a photoresponse time of 65 ns, which is 4 times shorter than that of reference PbS CQD devices.

13.
Adv Mater ; 33(33): e2101056, 2021 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34245178

ABSTRACT

Charge carrier transport in colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solids is strongly influenced by coupling among CQDs. The shape of as-synthesized CQDs results in random orientational relationships among facets in CQD solids, and this limits the CQD coupling strength and the resultant performance of optoelectronic devices. Here, colloidal-phase reconstruction of CQD surfaces, which improves facet alignment in CQD solids, is reported. This strategy enables control over CQD faceting and allows demonstration of enhanced coupling in CQD solids. The approach utilizes post-synthetic resurfacing and unites surface passivation and colloidal stability with a propensity for dots to couple via (100):(100) facets, enabling increased hole mobility. Experimentally, the CQD solids exhibit a 10× increase in measured hole mobility compared to control CQD solids, and enable photodiodes (PDs) exhibiting 70% external quantum efficiency (vs 45% for control devices) and specific detectivity, D* > 1012  Jones, each at 1550 nm. The photodetectors feature a 7 ns response time for a 0.01 mm2 area-the fastest reported for solution-processed short-wavelength infrared PDs.

14.
Adv Mater ; 32(48): e2004985, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33118229

ABSTRACT

The need for optoelectronic and chemical compatibility between the layers in colloidal quantum dot (CQD) photovoltaic devices remains a bottleneck in further increasing performance. Conjugated polymers are promising candidates as new hole-transport layer (HTL) materials in CQD solar cells (CQD-SCs) owing to the highly tunable optoelectronic properties and compatible chemistries. A diketopyrrolopyrrole-based polymer with benzothiadiazole derivatives (PD2FCT-29DPP) as an HTL in these devices is reported. The energy level, molecular orientation, and hole mobility of this HTL are manipulated through molecular engineering. By levering the polymer's optical absorption spectrum complementary to that of the CQD active layer, EQE across the visible and near-infrared regions is maximized. As a result, a PD2FCT-29DPP-based device exhibits a fill factor of 70% and approximately 35% efficiency enhancement compared to a PTB7-based device.

15.
Adv Mater ; 32(42): e2004657, 2020 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32939875

ABSTRACT

Monolithically integrated hybrid tandem solar cells (TSCs) that combine solution-processed colloidal quantum dot (CQD) and organic molecules are a promising device architecture, able to complement the absorption across the visible to the infrared. However, the performance of organic/CQD hybrid TSCs has not yet surpassed that of single-junction CQD solar cells. Here, a strategic optical structure is devised to overcome the prior performance limit of hybrid TSCs by employing a multibuffer layer and a dual near-infrared (NIR) absorber. In particular, a multibuffer layer is introduced to solve the problem of the CQD solvent penetrating the underlying organic layer. In addition, the matching current of monolithic TSCs is significantly improved to 15.2 mA cm-2 by using a dual NIR organic absorber that complements the absorption of CQD. The hybrid TSCs reach a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 13.7%, higher than that of the corresponding individual single-junction cells, representing the highest efficiency reported to date for CQD-based hybrid TSCs.

16.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 4814, 2020 Sep 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32968078

ABSTRACT

Surface ligands enable control over the dispersibility of colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) via steric and electrostatic stabilization. Today's device-grade CQD inks have consistently relied on highly polar solvents: this enables facile single-step deposition of multi-hundred-nanometer-thick CQD films; but it prevents the realization of CQD film stacks made up of CQDs having different compositions, since polar solvents redisperse underlying films. Here we introduce aromatic ligands to achieve process-orthogonal CQD inks, and enable thereby multifunctional multilayer CQD solids. We explore the effect of the anchoring group of the aromatic ligand on the solubility of CQD inks in weakly-polar solvents, and find that a judicious selection of the anchoring group induces a dipole that provides additional CQD-solvent interactions. This enables colloidal stability without relying on bulky insulating ligands. We showcase the benefit of this ink as the hole transport layer in CQD optoelectronics, achieving an external quantum efficiency of 84% at 1210 nm.

17.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 7(15): 2000894, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32775165

ABSTRACT

Colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are of interest for optoelectronic applications owing to their tunable properties and ease of processing. Large-diameter CQDs offer optical response in the infrared (IR), beyond the bandgap of c-Si and perovskites. The absorption coefficient of IR CQDs (≈104 cm-1) entails the need for micrometer-thick films to maximize the absorption of IR light. This exceeds the thickness compatible with the efficient extraction of photogenerated carriers, a fact that limits device performance. Here, CQD bulk heterojunction solids are demonstrated that, with extended carrier transport length, enable efficient IR light harvesting. An in-solution doping strategy for large-diameter CQDs is devised that addresses the complex interplay between (100) facets and doping agents, enabling to control CQD doping, energetic configuration, and size homogeneity. The hetero-offset between n-type CQDs and p-type CQDs is manipulated to drive the transfer of electrons and holes into distinct carrier extraction pathways. This enables to form active layers exceeding thicknesses of 700 nm without compromising open-circuit voltage and fill factor. As a result, >90% charge extraction efficiency across the ultraviolet to IR range (350-1400 nm) is documented.

18.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 15(8): 668-674, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32632321

ABSTRACT

Colloidal quantum dot (QD) solids are emerging semiconductors that have been actively explored in fundamental studies of charge transport1 and for applications in optoelectronics2. Forming high-quality QD solids-necessary for device fabrication-requires substitution of the long organic ligands used for synthesis with short ligands that provide increased QD coupling and improved charge transport3. However, in perovskite QDs, the polar solvents used to carry out the ligand exchange decompose the highly ionic perovskites4. Here we report perovskite QD resurfacing to achieve a bipolar shell consisting of an inner anion shell, and an outer shell comprised of cations and polar solvent molecules. The outer shell is electrostatically adsorbed to the negatively charged inner shell. This approach produces strongly confined perovskite QD solids that feature improved carrier mobility (≥0.01 cm2 V-1 s-1) and reduced trap density relative to previously reported low-dimensional perovskites. Blue-emitting QD films exhibit photoluminescence quantum yields exceeding 90%. By exploiting the improved mobility, we have been able to fabricate CsPbBr3 QD-based efficient blue and green light-emitting diodes. Blue devices with reduced trap density have an external quantum efficiency of 12.3%; the green devices achieve an external quantum efficiency of 22%.

19.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 3040, 2020 Jun 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32546822

ABSTRACT

The next-generation wearable near-eye displays inevitably require extremely high pixel density due to significant decrease in the viewing distance. For such denser and smaller pixel arrays, the emissive material must exhibit wider colour gamut so that each of the vast pixels maintains the colour accuracy. Electroluminescent quantum dot light-emitting diodes are promising candidates for such application owing to their highly saturated colour gamuts and other excellent optoelectronic properties. However, previously reported quantum dot patterning technologies have limitations in demonstrating full-colour pixel arrays with sub-micron feature size, high fidelity, and high post-patterning device performance. Here, we show thermodynamic-driven immersion transfer-printing, which enables patterning and printing of quantum dot arrays in omni-resolution scale; quantum dot arrays from single-particle resolution to the entire film can be fabricated on diverse surfaces. Red-green-blue quantum dot arrays with unprecedented resolutions up to 368 pixels per degree is demonstrated.

20.
Nano Lett ; 20(5): 3694-3702, 2020 May 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32227970

ABSTRACT

Increasing the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cells has relied on improving the passivation of CQD surfaces, enhancing CQD coupling and charge transport, and advancing device architecture. The presence of hydroxyl groups on the nanoparticle surface, as well as dimers-fusion between CQDs-has been found to be the major source of trap states, detrimental to optoelectronic properties and device performance. Here, we introduce a CQD reconstruction step that decreases surface hydroxyl groups and dimers simultaneously. We explored the dynamic interaction of charge carriers between band-edge states and trap states in CQDs using time-resolved spectroscopy, showing that trap to ground-state recombination occurs mainly from surface defects in coupled CQD solids passivated using simple metal halides. Using CQD reconstruction, we demonstrate a 60% reduction in trap density and a 25% improvement in charge diffusion length. These translate into a PCE of 12.5% compared to 10.9% for control CQDs.

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