Sulfur precursors for nanostructured materials
Nanostructured materials have intriguing photoluminescent properties due to their small size. These properties are tunable based on the exact size of particle used, making nanocrystals excellent candidates for LED displays, bioimaging tools, and solar cells. However, current synthetic methods to make these nanocrystals are lacking in precision; it is difficult to produce a uniform sample with crystals of low dispersity. This technology uses a sulfur-containing thiourea precursor to make cadmium sulfide and lead sulfide nanocrystals in a highly controlled manner. The use of this precursor has the potential to generate nanocrystals of a consistent size for more precise optoelectrical devices.
Low-cost, air-stable synthesis process using readily available reagentsUses relatively less toxic precursorsEasily tunable nanocrystal size for desired optoelectrical propertiesImproved yield of nanocrystals of the desired sizePatent Information:Patent Pending (WO/2015/048460)Patent Pending (WO/2016/115416)Patent Pending (US 20160237345)Tech Ventures Reference: IR CU13315
Nanocrystals with a narrow size distribution for precise research and developmentNanocrystal-based LED displays Bioimaging toolsMaterials for solar cellsSynthesis of core-shell nanoparticle structures
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