Abstract

We suggest a method for efficient (high-coverage) grafting of organic molecules onto photoluminescent silicon nanoparticles. High coverage grafting was enabled by use of a modified etching process that produces a hydrogen-terminated surface on the nanoparticles with very little residual oxygen and by carefully excluding oxygen during the grafting process. It had not previously been possible to produce such a clean H-terminated surface on free silicon nanoparticles or, subsequently, to produce grafted particles without significant surface oxygen. This allowed us to (1) prepare air-stable green-emitting silicon nanoparticles, (2) prepare stable dispersions of grafted silicon nanoparticles in a variety of organic solvents from which particles can readily be precipitated by addition of nonsolvent, dried, and redispersed, (3) separate these nanoparticles by size (and therefore emission color) using conventional chromatographic methods, (4) protect the particles from chemical attack and photoluminescence quenching, and (5) provide functional groups on the particle surface for further derivatization. We also show, using 1H NMR, that the photoinitiated hydrosilylation reaction does not specifically graft the terminal carbon atom to the surface but that attachment at both the first and second atom occurs.

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