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Electronic effects of nano-confinement in functional organic and inorganic materials for optoelectronics

Authors
Ko, J.Berger, R.Lee, H.Yoon, H.Cho, J.Char, K.
Issue Date
7-Mar-2021
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Citation
Chemical Society Reviews, v.50, no.5, pp.3585 - 3628
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Chemical Society Reviews
Volume
50
Number
5
Start Page
3585
End Page
3628
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/129089
DOI
10.1039/d0cs01501f
ISSN
0306-0012
Abstract
When various optically and/or electronically active materials, such as conjugated polymers, perovskites, metals, and metal oxides, are confined at the nanoscale, they can exhibit unique nano-confined behavior that significantly differs from the behavior observed at the macroscale. Although controlled nano-confinement of functional materials can allow modulation of their electronic properties without the aid of any synthetic methodologies or additional chemical treatments, limited assembly approaches for nano-confinement and insufficient analytical tools for electronic characterization remain critical challenges in the development of novel optoelectronic materials and the investigation of their modulated properties. This review describes how the nano-confined features of organic and inorganic materials are related to the control and improvement of their optoelectronic properties. In particular, we focus on various assembly approaches for effective nano-confinement as well as methods for nano-electronic characterization. Then, we briefly present challenges and perspectives on the direction of nano-confinement in terms of the preparation of optoelectronic materials with desired functionalities. Furthermore, we believe that this review can provide a basis for developing and designing next-generation optoelectronics through nano-confinement. © 2021 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
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