RESUMEN
Three-dimensional topological insulators (3D TI) exhibit conventional parabolic bulk bands and protected Dirac surface states. A thorough investigation of the different transport channels provided by the bulk and surface carriers using macroscopic samples may provide a path toward accessing superior surface transport properties. Bi2 Te3 materials make promising 3D TI models; however, due to their complicated defect chemistry, these materials have a high number of charge carriers in the bulk that dominate the transport, even as nanograined structures. To partially control the bulk charge carrier density, herein the synthesis of Te-enriched Bi2 Te3 nanoparticles is reported. The resulting nanoparticles are compacted into nanograined pellets of varying porosity to tailor the surface-to-volume ratio, thereby emphasizing the surface transport channels. The nanograined pellets are characterized by a combination of resistivity, Hall- and magneto-conductance measurements together with (THz) time-domain reflectivity measurements. Using the Hikami-Larkin-Nagaoka (HLN) model, a characteristic coherence length of ≈200 nm is reported that is considerably larger than the diameter of the nanograins. The different contributions from the bulk and surface carriers are disentangled by THz spectroscopy, thus emphasizing the dominant role of the surface carriers. The results strongly suggest that the surface transport carriers have overcome the hindrance imposed by nanoparticle boundaries.
RESUMEN
Incorporation of directing amide groups has been shown to facilitate the topochemical polymerization of 1,3-butadiyne (diacetylene) groups in noncrystalline phases such as gels, amorphous solids, and liquid crystals. It remains challenging to polymerize 1,3-butadiyne-containing alkylthiolate ligands within their self-assembled monolayers on gold nanoparticles (AuNPs), which enhances their stability and adds new optical and electronic properties. Especially smaller AuNPs of sizes below 5 nm in diameter have been reported to display sluggish photopolymerization and are susceptible to photodegradation under UV irradiation. To probe the effectiveness of the amide-directed photopolymerization of 1,3-butadiyne ligands, small AuNPs in the 2-4 nm range were synthesized that contain alkylthiolate ligands with and without amide and 1,3-butadiyne groups. Their photopolymerization and photostability were studied by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), UV-vis spectroscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. AuNP with amide-free 1,3-butadiyne ligands templated the polymerization of the 1,3-butadiyne ligands but fused to large and insoluble particles during the polymerization process. AuNPs with ligands containing both 1,3-butadiyne and amide groups polymerized significantly faster, which slowed down photodegradation. A UV irradiation (254 nm and 176 W/m2) for 5-10 min was found to be optimal for the AuNPs with directing amide groups studied here, although their average core sizes grew from 3.8 to 4.0 nm in diameter and about 20% of the attached 1,3-butadiyne ligands remained unreacted after 10 minutes of irradiation. About 75% of the attached 1,3-butadiyne ligands were already polymerized during the first 5 min of UV irradiation. This decrease in reactivity is reasoned with a fast polymerization of ligands attached to facet sites and slower polymerization rates for ligands attached to edge and corner sites. Unexpectedly, photopolymerization occurred only in the presence of solvent, whereas no polydiacetylene was generated when dry powders of any of the diacetylene-containing gold nanoparticles were irradiated.
RESUMEN
3D topological insulators (TI) host surface carriers with extremely high mobility. However, their transport properties are typically dominated by bulk carriers that outnumber the surface carriers by orders of magnitude. A strategy is herein presented to overcome the problem of bulk carrier domination by using 3D TI nanoparticles, which are compacted by hot pressing to macroscopic nanograined bulk samples. Bi2 Te3 nanoparticles well known for their excellent thermoelectric and 3D TI properties serve as the model system. As key enabler for this approach, a specific synthesis is applied that creates nanoparticles with a low level of impurities and surface contamination. The compacted nanograined bulk contains a high number of interfaces and grain boundaries. Here it is shown that these samples exhibit metallic-like electrical transport properties and a distinct weak antilocalization. A downward trend in the electrical resistivity at temperatures below 5 K is attributed to an increase in the coherence length by applying the Hikami-Larkin-Nagaoka model. THz time-domain spectroscopy reveals a dominance of the surface transport at low frequencies with a mobility of above 103 cm2 V-1 s-1 even at room temperature. These findings clearly demonstrate that nanograined bulk Bi2 Te3 features surface carrier properties that are of importance for technical applications.
RESUMEN
Phase-pure crystalline Bi2Se3 and Bi2Te3 nanoparticles are formed in reactions of [C4C1Im]3[Bi3I12] (C4C1Im = 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium) with [C4C1Pyr][ESiMe3] (E = Se or Te; C4C1Pyr = 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium) in the ionic liquid (IL) [C4C1Im]I. The resulting crystalline tetradymite-type nanoparticles exhibit stoichiometric Bi:E (E = Se or Te) molar ratios (2:3). Because all synthetic steps were performed under strict inert gas conditions, the surfaces of the Bi2Se3 and Bi2Te3 nanoparticles are free of metal oxide species. As proven by infrared and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analyses, the nanoparticle surfaces reveal only minor organic contamination from solvent residues ([C4C1Im]I). The nanomaterials show high Seebeck coefficients of -124 µV K-1 (Bi2Se3) and -155 µV K-1 (Bi2Te3) and feature high electrical conductivities (328 and 946 S cm-1, respectively) at the highest tested temperature (240 °C). The corresponding thermal conductivities (0.8 and 2.3 W m-1 K-1, respectively, at 30 °C) are comparable to those of single crystals and recently reported ab initio calculations, which is in remarkable contrast to typical findings of nanograined bulk materials obtained from compacted nanoparticles. These findings emphasize the low level of impurities, surface contamination, and, in general, defects produced by the synthetic approach reported here. The figure of merit in the in-plane direction of the compacted pellets reached peak values 0.45 for Bi2Se3 and 0.4 for Bi2Te3.
RESUMEN
The synthesis of phase-pure ternary solutions of tetradymite-type materials (Bix Sb1-x )2 Te3 (x=0.25; 0.50; 0.75) in an ionic liquid approach has been carried out. The nanoparticles are characterized by means of energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and transmission electron microscopy. In addition, the role of different processing approaches on the thermoelectric properties - Seebeck coefficient as well as electrical and thermal conductivity - is demonstrated.