Abstract

Structural and optical properties of cadmium alkanoates nanocomposites with cadmium sulfide (CdS) quantum dots (QDs) have been studied by using various techniques: small angle X-ray scattering, transmission electron microscopy, optical absorption spectroscopy and photoluminescence. QDs are chemically synthesised in thermotropic ionic liquid crystalline (ILC) phase of cadmium alkanoates that have smectic-type ordering and are used as nanoreactors. Anisotropic glassy nanocomposites are obtained by rapid cooling the thermotropic ILC nanocomposites to the room temperature. For synthesis of CdS QDs are used cadmium capronate matrix or cadmium octanoate matrix and their binary mixture. Our results show that in the new cadmium alkanoates matrices, the CdS QDs have a small dispersion of their sizes, their shape is nearly spherical, they are stable over time and they are ordered in a layered smectic A matrix. QDs in cadmium octanoate and in cadmium capronate matrices have the dominant characteristic sizes of 2.7 and 2.8 nm, respectively. In the binary mixture, the QDs have two dominant characteristic sizes of 2.7 and 3.6 nm. The glassy nanocomposites show spectra both of absorption and of photoluminescence in near-ultraviolet and blue visible spectral range.

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