AI Chat Paper
Note: Please note that the following content is generated by AMiner AI. SciOpen does not take any responsibility related to this content.
{{lang === 'zh_CN' ? '文章概述' : 'Summary'}}
{{lang === 'en_US' ? '中' : 'Eng'}}
Chat more with AI
PDF (14.5 MB)
Collect
Submit Manuscript AI Chat Paper
Show Outline
Outline
Show full outline
Hide outline
Outline
Show full outline
Hide outline
Research Article | Open Access

Balancing monomer and ionic ligand supply for scalable direct synthesis of short-wavelength infrared PbS quantum dot inks

Xingyu Zhou1,§Xiaobo Ding1,§Yang Liu1Jiayu Xu1Can Gao1Lin Yuan1Xiang Sun1Zeke Liu1,2 ( )Wanli Ma1,2 ( )
Institute of Functional Nano & Soft Materials (FUNSOM), Joint International Research Laboratory of Carbon-Based Functional Materials and Devices, Soochow University, Suzhou 215123, China
Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Advanced Negative Carbon Technologies, Soochow University, Suzhou 215123, China

§ Xingyu Zhou and Xiaobo Ding contributed equally to this work.

Show Author Information

Abstract

The direct synthesis of semi-conductive quantum dot (QD) inks coordinated by inorganic ions in polar phases presents potential advantages such as low cost and scalability, making it an ideal approach for realizing QDs-based optoelectronic applications. However, the weak repulsive forces between QDs coordinated by inorganic ions can easily lead to agglomeration, significantly limiting size control during the synthesis process. Distinct from the traditional high-temperature injection and low-temperature growth strategy used in the synthesis of QDs with long-chain organic ligands, we discover that low-temperature injection nucleation and high-temperature growth is an effective strategy to achieve controllable tuning of reactive monomers and ligand ions in the direct synthesis system of inorganic ion-liganded QD inks, which in turn realizes the scalable, low-cost, and direct synthesis of uniform and size-tunable short-wavelength infrared (SWIR) PbS QD inks. The yield of single synthesis can be more than 10 g. Compared with the traditional ligand exchange method, the yield is improved by nearly 3 times and the cost is reduced to 7 times. Finally, the solar cell devices fabricated using these PbS SWIR QD inks achieved a photovoltaic conversion efficiency of approaching 9%, confirming the excellent optoelectronic performance of the synthesized PbS QD materials.

Graphical Abstract

This study reveals that low-temperature nucleation and high-temperature growth represent an effective strategy for balancing monomer and ionic ligand supply in the direct synthesis of ions-coordinated quantum dot (QD) inks. This innovative approach enables the scalable, cost-effective preparation of uniform and size-tunable short-wavelength infrared (SWIR) PbS QD inks.

Electronic Supplementary Material

Download File(s)
7504_ESM.pdf (800.1 KB)

References

【1】
【1】
 
 
Nano Research
Article number: 94907504

{{item.num}}

Comments on this article

Go to comment

< Back to all reports

Review Status: {{reviewData.commendedNum}} Commended , {{reviewData.revisionRequiredNum}} Revision Required , {{reviewData.notCommendedNum}} Not Commended Under Peer Review

Review Comment

Close
Close
Cite this article:
Zhou X, Ding X, Liu Y, et al. Balancing monomer and ionic ligand supply for scalable direct synthesis of short-wavelength infrared PbS quantum dot inks. Nano Research, 2025, 18(9): 94907504. https://doi.org/10.26599/NR.2025.94907504
Topics:

2181

Views

461

Downloads

2

Crossref

1

Web of Science

1

Scopus

0

CSCD

Received: 28 January 2025
Revised: 20 March 2025
Accepted: 24 April 2025
Published: 24 June 2025
© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Tsinghua University Press.

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).