Addition, Suppression, and Inhibition in the Electrophoretic Deposition of Nanocrystal Mixture Films
Nanocrystals in solutions can
be attracted to an electrode with an applied voltage, when the
nanocrystals are charged, and then deposit to form a film composed
of nanocrytals; this is one form of electrophoretic deposition.
For CdSe nanocrystals in the mixture, films composed of CdSe nanocrystals
form on both electrodes (top figure, blue dots). When iron oxide
nanocrystals (red dots) are added to this solution, films composed
of both CdSe and iron oxide nanocrystals form on both electrodes
(middle figure); this is additive behavior, and is quite expected.
In contrast, when gold dots (yellow dots) are added to the CdSe
nanocrystals, deposition occurs only on the positive electrode,
and only CdSe nanocrystals are deposited (lower figure, suppression).
With lower and lower concentrations of gold nanocrystals in the
solution, a film of increasing thickness - of only CdSe nanocrystals
- starts to form on the negative electrode (suppression). This
unexepected non-additive behavior is likely due to complex chemistry
between the nanocrystals in solution. This work was done by Prof.
Irving Herman, with Prof. Rastislav Levicky, Prof. Stephen OBrien
and other collaborators in the Columbia University MRSEC.
Posted
March 4, 2003.
For more details, please contact Irving
Herman.
(This work appeared in Nano Letters. 3, 1603-1606 (2003).)
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 Initial solutions (left) and final electrophoretically depos
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