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ACS Nano ; 6(2): 1601-8, 2012 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22260241

ABSTRACT

Quantum dots-based electron donor-acceptor systems play a rising role in the design of renewable and carbon-free energy harvesting technologies. In this article, we discuss the photofabrication of fullerene-shelled quantum dots supramolecular nanoparticles, in which the fullerene shell acts as not only a well-defined electron acceptor but also a robust protecting layer against the photocorrosion of the quantum dot core. We evaluate the ensemble and single-molecule electron transfer from the core to the shell in the nanoparticles and the photocurrent response of a photoelectrochemical cell constructed using the nanoparticles. The supramolecular nanoparticle has been prepared by the covalent tethering of a fullerene-thiol monolayer to the quantum dot followed by the photochemical reactions of free fullerene-thiol to the tethered monolayer. The nanoparticles are characterized using scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Correlated single-photon emission and the two-state ON-OFF photoluminescence show that single quantum dots are included in the supramolecular nanoparticles. The fullerene-shells suppress the blinking of single quantum dots by acting as well-defined electron traps, without allowing the transfer of Auger electrons to unknown traps. Electron transfer from the quantum dot-core to the fullerene-shell is apparent from the short ON and OFF durations in the photoluminescence intensity trajectories of single quantum dots, quenching of the photoluminescence intensity and lifetime of quantum dots at the ensemble level, and the characteristic transient absorption band of the anion radical of fullerene. We next construct a photoelectrochemical cell using the supramolecular nanoparticles, and the transferred electron is externally driven in the cell to generate ∼400 µA/cm(2) photocurrent. Electron transfer from the highly stable quantum dots to the protecting fullerene-shells places the supramolecular nanoparticles among the most promising antenna systems for the construction of cost-effective and stable next generation solar energy harvesting systems.

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