Abstract
We report the synthesis of ultrathin indium sulfide In2S3 nanoribbons which display a giant aspect ratio using a simple and fast solvothermal method. They have a sub-nanometer thickness controlled at the atomic level, a width of (8.7 ± 0.1) nm and a length which can reach several micrometers. We determine the atomic composition of the inorganic core by Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS) and measure by X-ray photoelectron spectrometry (XPS) an oleylamine surface coverage of 2.3 ligands per nm2. X-ray diffraction experiments and simulations as well as high-resolution dark-field STEM point toward a P3m1 trigonal crystallographic structure (g phase). Transport measurements show that the nanoribbons display n-type semiconductor unipolar behavior. Their lateral dimensions can be tuned by reaction time, temperature and by the amount of water present in the reaction medium: anhydrous synthesis conditions lead to hexagonal nanoplates, whereas controlled addition of water induces a symmetry break yielding long rectangular nanoribbons. Depending on the dispersion solvent, these long ribbon-like nanoparticles can form either well-dispersed colloids or bundles in which they stack face-to-face. Their large aspect ratio induces the formation of gels at volume fractions as low as 1.3 × 10-4
making them supergelators. The kinetics of gelation is strongly accelerated by an increase in the relative humidity of the ambient atmosphere.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary information for Synthesis, structure, and gelling power of gamma-In2S3 nanoribbons with large aspect ratio.
Description
Uncertainty calculations, surface density of ligands, temperature dependance of the synthesis and supplementary figures (UV-VIS, TEM, X-ray diffraction simulations, gel photo, raman spectrum etc..)
Actions