Three Synthetic Routes to Single-Crystalline PbS Nanowires with Controlled Growth Direction and Their Electrical Transport Properties
- Authors
- Jang, So Young; Song, Yun Mi; Kim, Han Sung; Cho, Yong Jae; Seo, Young Suk; Jung, Gyeong Bok; Lee, Chi-Woo; Park, Jeunghee; Jung, Minkyung; Kim, Jinhee; Kim, Bongsoo; Kim, Jin-Gyu; Kim, Youn-Joong
- Issue Date
- Apr-2010
- Publisher
- AMER CHEMICAL SOC
- Keywords
- PbS nanowires; controlled growth direction; solvothermal; chemical vapor transport; gas-phase substitution; field effect transistors
- Citation
- ACS NANO, v.4, no.4, pp 2391 - 2401
- Pages
- 11
- Indexed
- SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- ACS NANO
- Volume
- 4
- Number
- 4
- Start Page
- 2391
- End Page
- 2401
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/116697
- DOI
- 10.1021/nn100163k
- ISSN
- 1936-0851
1936-086X
- Abstract
- Single-crystalline rock-salt PbS nanowires (NWs) were synthesized using three different routes; the solvothermal, chemical vapor transport, and gas-phase substitution reaction of pregrown CdS NWs. They were uniformly grown with the (1001 or [110], [112] direction in a controlled manner. In the solvothermal growth, the oriented attachment of the octylamine (OA) ligands enables the NWs to be produced with a controlled morphology and growth direction. As the concentration of OA increases, the growth direction evolves from the [100] to the higher surface-energy [110] and [112] directions under the more thermodynamically controlled growth conditions. In the synthesis involving chemical vapor transport and the substitution reaction, the use of a lower growth temperature causes the higher surface-energy growth direction to change from [100] to [110]. The high-resolution X-ray diffraction pattern and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy results revealed that a thinner oxide-layer was produced on the surface of the PbS NWs by the substitution reaction. We fabricated field effect transistors using single PbS NW, which showed intrinsic p-type semiconductor characteristics for all three routes. For the PbS NW with a thinner oxide layer, the carrier mobility was measured to be as high as 10 cm(2) V-1 s(-1).
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Collections - College of Science and Technology > Department of Advanced Materials Chemistry > 1. Journal Articles
- Graduate School > Department of Advanced Materials Chemistry > 1. Journal Articles

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