Lead sulfide (PbS)
nanoparticles were synthesized by chemical methods
with different sizes and different capping ligands (oleic acid, myristic
acid, and hexanoic acid), avoiding ligand exchange procedures, to
study the effect of characteristics of the capping ligands on their
energy levels and band gap values. Experimental results (UV–vis–NIR,
Fourier transform infrared, and Raman spectroscopies, cyclic voltammetry,
transmission electron microscopy, and electron energy loss spectroscopy)
showed a marked influence of the capping ligand nature on the electro-optical
properties of PbS nanoparticles with a very similar size. Differences
were observed in the atomistic arrangement on the nanoparticle surface
and phonon vibrations with the different capping ligands. These observations
suggest that the electro-optical properties of PbS nanoparticles are
not only determined by their size, through quantum confinement effects,
but also strongly affected by the atomistic arrangement on the nanoparticle
surface, which is determined by the capping ligand nature.
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