Abstract

Reports on photoluminescent colloidal semiconductor two-dimensional (2D) helical nanostructures with one-dimensional quantum confinement are relatively rare. Here, we discuss the formation of such photoluminescent nanostructures for CdSe. We show that when as-synthesized unpurified zero-dimensional (0D) CdSe magic-size clusters (MSCs) (passivated by carboxylate ligands with three-dimensional quantum confinement) are dispersed in a solvent (such as toluene or chloroform) containing hexadecylamine and then subjected to sonication, helical nanostructures are obtained, as observed by transmission electron microscopy. We demonstrate that the formation involves the self-assembly of 0D MSCs into 2D nanoplatelets, which act as intermediates. The CdSe MSCs and their self-assembled 2D nanostructures display almost identical static optical properties, namely, a sharp absorption doublet with peaks at 433 and 460 nm and a narrow emission peak at 465 nm; this is a subject for further study. This study introduces new methods for fabricating photoluminescent helical nanostructures via the self-assembly of photoluminescent MSCs.

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