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1.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 679(Pt A): 465-475, 2024 Oct 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39368166

RESUMO

HYPOTHESIS: Building competitive color conversion pixels for microdisplays made of semiconductor nanocrystals requires reaching a deposition thickness high enough to absorb all the blue light from the backlight unit. In the case of dielectrophoretic directed assembly of such nanocrystals, modeling and simulations may help understand what the intrinsic limitations of the process are, and may be used to propose new assembly routes. EXPERIMENTS: A theoretical model of dielectrophoretic interactions between polarizable nano-spheres and an electrostatically patterned substrate has been developed. Monte Carlo simulations have been run using this model to rationalize the effects of parameters driving the dielectrophoretic directed assembly and to find optimal deposition conditions for reaching a maximal thickness of nanocrystal pixels. Experiments with CdSe quantum plates and with alumina spheres embedding quantum plates (micro-pearls) have been carried out and compared to the model. FINDINGS: Modeling and simulations reveal that the directed assembly of semiconductor nanocrystals is limited essentially by the small object size, which sets the maximum dielectrophoretic force they can undergo. They indicate that using larger objects should allow reaching unprecedented assembly heights, but will induce lateral extension of the assembly. This trade-off has been illustrated with diagrams in the parameter space and confirmed experimentally with micro-pearls.

2.
ACS Nano ; 12(2): 1139-1145, 2018 02 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29266928

RESUMO

By a combination of solution and on-surface chemistry, we synthesized an asymmetric starphene molecule with two long anthracenyl input branches and a short naphthyl output branch on the Au(111) surface. Starting from this molecule, we could demonstrate the working principle of a single molecule NAND logic gate by selectively contacting single gold atoms by atomic manipulation to the longer branches of the molecule. The logical input "1" ("0") is defined by the interaction (noninteraction) of a gold atom with one of the input branches. The output is measured by scanning tunneling spectroscopy following the shift in energy of the electronic tunneling resonances at the end of the short branch of the molecule.

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