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HgTe nanocrystals

Kim, H. Cho, K. Kim, D.-W. Lee, H.-R. Kim, S. 2006. Bottom-and top-gate field-effect thin-film transistors with p channels of sintered HgTe nanocrystals. Appl. Phys. Lett. 89 173107-173110. [Pg.343]

Rogach, A. L. Koktysh, D. S. Harrison, M. Kotov, N. A., Layer by layer assembled films of HgTe nanocrystals with strong infrared emission, Chem. Mater. 2000, 12, 1526 1528... [Pg.122]

Gunes S, Neugebauer H, Sariciftci NS, Roither J, Kovalenko M, Pillwein G, Heiss W (2006) Hybrid solar cells using HgTe nanocrystals and nanoporous Ti02 electrodes. Adv Eunct Mater 16 1095... [Pg.83]

Figure 3.14 Powder X-ray difFractogram of HgTe nanocrystals ( thiol synthesis ) with corresponding bulk values given as a line spectrum. From Ref. [37]. Figure 3.14 Powder X-ray difFractogram of HgTe nanocrystals ( thiol synthesis ) with corresponding bulk values given as a line spectrum. From Ref. [37].
Rogach A, Kershaw S, Burt M, Harrison M, Komowski A, Eychmuller A, Weller H (1999) Colloidally prepared HgTe nanocrystals with strong room-temperature infrared luminescence. Adv Mater 11 552... [Pg.28]

C. Other nanostructures are also obtained by this preparation [243]. A solvothermal reaction in the presence of octadecylamine yields monodisperse PbSe nanocrystals of controllable size [244]. A low-temperature one-pot synthesis of HgTe nanocrystals has been described without the use of toxic precursors. The particles show infrared photoluminescence [245]. [Pg.40]

Many other systems based on different nanoparticles have been introduced, such as copper indium disulfide (CuInS2) [263-265], copper indium diselenide (CuInSe2) [266,267], cadmium telluride (CdTe) [268], lead sulfide (PbS) [269,270], lead selenide (PdSe) [271], and mercury telluride (HgTe) [272]. Some of these systems show enhanced spectral response well into the infrared part of the solar spectrum [271,272]. In most cases the absorption of the nanocrystals was, however, quantitatively small as compared to the conjugated polymers. [Pg.57]

The same preparative approach - that is, the dissolution of a metal salt in water in the presence of a stabilizing thiol - yielded nanocrystals of CdSe [132], CdTe [133-136], HgTe [137], ZnSe [138], CdHgTe [139-141], ZnCdSe [142], and CdSeTe [143] (for recent reviews on this subject, see also Refs [144, 145]). The thiols used included 1-thioglycerol, 2-mercaptoethanol, l-mercapto-2-propanol, l,2-dimercapto-3-propanol, thioglycolic acid, thiolactic acid, and cysteamine [146]. [Pg.77]


See other pages where HgTe nanocrystals is mentioned: [Pg.59]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.5580]    [Pg.605]    [Pg.608]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.5579]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.460]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.202]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.78 ]




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