Ligand Binding to Distinct Sites on Nanocrystals Affecting Energy and Charge Transfer

J Phys Chem Lett. 2015 May 7;6(9):1709-13. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.5b00574. Epub 2015 Apr 22.

Abstract

Hybrid optoelectronic devices are attractive because they offer the promise of low-cost, roll-to-roll fabrication. Despite this, energy transfer between organic and inorganic interfaces is not well understood. Device engineering on this class of solution-processed materials generally focuses on replacing the long insulating ligands with short ones. Here, we show that energy and charge transfer between an inorganic nanocrystal (NC) donor and organic molecular acceptor is acutely sensitive to the chemical moiety linking the two species. Our results reveal that the CdS NCs have distinct binding sites for different chemical species because only resonance energy transfer (RET) is observed for the carboxylic-acid-functionalized ligand, while both RET and charge transfer are observed for the amine-functionalized ligand. We observe that the equilibrium constant for this static quenching term increases with decreasing particle size. This finding offers a new approach in the design of hybrid thin films for devices and NC probes based on RET used for imaging, sensing, signal transduction, and photon management.

Keywords: FRET; binding moiety; cadmium sulfide nanocrystal; ligand binding; static quenching.