Understanding and unlocking the potential of semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) is important for future applications ranging from biomedical imaging contrast agents to the next generation of solar cells and LEDs. Silicon NCs (Si NCs) have key advantages compared with other semiconductor NCs due to silicon's high natural abundance, low toxicity and strong biocompatibility, and unique size, and surface dependent optical properties. In this Account, we review and discuss the synthesis, surface modification, purification, optical properties, and applications of Si NCs. The synthetic methods used to make Si NCs have improved considerably in the last 5-10 years; highly monodisperse Si NCs can now be produced on the near gram scale. Scaled-up syntheses have allowed scientists to drive further toward the commercial utilization of Si NCs. The synthesis of doped Si NCs, through addition of a simple elemental precursor to a reaction mixture or by the production of a single source precursor, has shown great promise. Doped Si NCs have demonstrated unique or enhanced properties compared with pure Si NCs, for example, magnetism due to the presence of magnetic metals like Fe and Mn. Surface reactions have reached a new level of sophistication where organic (epoxidation and diol formation) and click (thiol based) chemical reactions can be carried out on attached surface molecules. This has led to a wide range of biocompatible functional groups as well as a degree of emission tuneability. The purification of Si NCs has been improved through the use of size separation columns and size selective precipitation. These purification approaches have yielded highly monodisperse and pure Si NCs previously unachieved. This has allowed scientists to study the size and surface dependent properties and toxicity and enabled the use of Si NCs in biomedical applications. The optical properties of Si NCs are complex. Using a combination of characterization techniques, researchers have explored the relation between the optical properties and the size, surface functionalization, and preparation method. This work has led to a greater fundamental understanding of the unique optical properties of Si NCs. Si NCs are being studied for a wide range of important applications, including LEDS with tunable electroluminescence ranging from NIR to yellow, the encapsulation of Si NCs within micelles terminated with proteins to allow targeted in vivo imaging of cells, Si NC-polymer hybrid solar cells, and the use of Si NCs in battery anodes with high theoretical capacity and good charge retention.
Silicon and germanium nanocrystals (NCs) are attractive materials owing to their unique size and surface‐dependent optical properties. The optical properties of silicon and germanium NCs make them highly suitable for a range of applications, including bioimaging, light‐emitting diodes, and solar cells. In this review, the solution synthesis, surface passivation, optical properties, biomedical applications, and cytotoxicity of silicon and germanium NCs are compared and contrasted. Over the last 10 years, synthetic protocols have improved considerably, with size control readily achieved. Investigations have begun into a range of silicon and germanium nanostructures, including doped, alloy, and metal–semiconductor hybrid NCs, which represent the next generation of silicon and germanium nanomaterials. Silicon and germanium NCs are actively researched for a wide array of biomedical applications, including, long‐term in vivo cellular imaging, fluorescent nanocarriers for drug delivery, and as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Cytotoxicity studies have shown the low toxicity of Si NCs, while demonstrating that Ge NCs are less toxic than CdSe NCs at similar concentrations, giving these materials a strong future in nanomedicine applications.
A new synthetic method was developed to produce a range of transition-metal (Mn, Ni, and Cu) doped silicon nanocrystals (Si NCs). The synthesis produces monodisperse undoped and doped Si NCs with comparable average sizes as shown by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Dopant composition was confirmed by EDX (energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy). The optical properties of undoped and doped were compared and contrasted using absorption (steady-state and transient) and photoluminescence spectroscopy. Doped Si NCs demonstrated unique dopant-dependent optical properties compared to undoped Si NCs such as enhanced subgap absorption, and 40 nm shifts in the emission. Transient absorption (TA) measurements showed that photoexcitations in doped Si NCs relaxed via dopant states not present in undoped Si NCs.
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