We present highly efficient electroluminescent devices using size-separated silicon nanocrystals (ncSi) as light emitting material. The emission color can be tuned from the deep red down to the yellow-orange spectral region by using very monodisperse size-separated nanoparticles. High external quantum efficiencies up to 1.1% as well as low turn-on voltages are obtained for red emitters. In addition, we demonstrate that size-separation of ncSi leads to drastically improved lifetimes of the devices and much less sensitivity of the emission wavelength to the applied drive voltage.
“Square‐within‐a‐square”: The first Cr–Dy single‐molecule magnet (SMM) with an energy barrier to spin reorientation of 15 K is presented. The anisotropy in this octanuclear compound arises from the orientations of the four DyIII centers (dark blue), which, in conjunction with the contributions from the CrIII centers (green), leads to the SMM behavior.
A contemporary question in the intensely active field of periodic mesoporous organosilica (PMO) materials is how large a silsesquioxane precursor can be self-assembled under template direction into the pore walls of an ordered mesostructure. An answer to this question is beginning to emerge with the ability to synthesize dendrimer, buckyball, and polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane PMOs. In this paper, we further expand the library of large-scale silsesquioxane precursors by demonstrating that photoluminescent nanocrystalline silicon that has been surface-capped with oligo(triethoxysilylethylene), denoted as ncSi:(CH(2)CH(2)Si(OEt)(3))(n)H, can be self-assembled into a photoluminescent nanocrystalline silicon periodic mesoporous organosilica (ncSi-PMO). A comprehensive multianalytical characterization of the structural and optical properties of ncSi-PMO demonstrates that the material gainfully combines the photoluminescent properties of nanocrystalline silicon with the porous structure of the PMO. This integration of two functional components makes ncSi-PMO a promising multifunctional material for optoelectronic and biomedical applications.
The synthesis and characterization of size-separated silicon nanocrystals functionalized with a heteroatom-substituted organic capping group, allylphenylsulfide, via photochemical hydrosilylation are described for the first time. These silicon nanocrystals form colloidally stable and highly photoluminescent dispersions in non-polar organic solvents with an absolute quantum yield as high as 52% which is 20% above that of the allylbenzene analogue. Solutions of the size-separated fractions are characterized over time to monitor the effect of aging in air by following the change of their photoluminescence and absolute quantum yields, supplemented by transmission electron microscopy.
We present a novel approach to produce a composite of the HKUST-1 metal−organic framework (MOF) and graphene, which is suited for the fabrication of monolithic coatings of solid substrates. In order to avoid the degradation of graphene electrical properties resulting from chemical functionalization (e.g., oxidation yielding graphene oxide, GO), commercial, nonmodified graphene was utilized. The one-pot synthesis of the moldable composite material allows for a controllable loading of graphene and the tuning of porosity. Potentially, this facile synthesis can be transferred to other MOF systems. The monolithic coatings reported here exhibit high surface areas (1156−1078 m 2 /g). The electrical conductivity was high (a range of 7.6 × 10 −6 S m −1 to 6.4 × 10 −1 S m −1 ) and was found to be proportional to the graphene content. The ability to readily attain different forms and shapes of the conductive, microporous composites indicates that the MOF@G system can provide a compelling approach to access various applications of MOFs, specifically in electrochemical catalysis, supercapacitors, and sensors.
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