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Nanocrystals Advance Potential of
Nanotechnology July 12,
2005
Novel electronic devices based upon nanotechnology may soon be realized
due to a new understanding of how impurities, or 'dopants,' can be
intentionally incorporated into semiconductor nanocrystals. This
understanding, announced today by researchers at the Naval Research
Laboratory and the University of Minnesota (UMN), should help enable a
variety of new technologies ranging from high-efficiency solar-cells and
lasers to futuristic 'spintronic' and ultra-sensitive biodetection
devices. The complete findings of the study are published in the July 7,
2005, issue of the journal Nature.
Figure
Doping discovery: impurities must stick to the surface of the
semiconductor nanocrystal long enough to be incorporated into the
growing particle.
Nanocrystals are tiny semiconductor particles just a few millionths of a
millimeter across. Due to their small size, they exhibit unique
electronic, optical, and magnetic properties that can be utilized in a
variety of technologies. To move toward this end, chemical methods have
been optimized over the last 20 years to synthesize extremely pure
nanocrystals. More problematic, however, has been the goal of controllably
incorporating selected impurities into these particles. Conventional
semiconductor devices, such as the transistor, would not operate without
such impurities. Moreover, theory predicts that dopants should have even
greater impact on semiconductor nanocrystals. Thus, doping is a critical
step for tailoring their properties for specific applications.
A long-standing mystery has been why impurities could not be incorporated
into some types of semiconductor nanocrystals.
The findings by NRL and UMN researchers establish the underlying reasons
for these difficulties, and provide a rational foundation for resolving
them in a wide variety of nanocrystal systems. "The key lies in the
nanocrystal's surface," said Dr. Steven Erwin, a physicist at NRL and lead
theorist on the project. "If an impurity atom can stick, or 'adsorb,' to
the surface strongly enough, it can eventually be incorporated into the
nanocrystal as it grows. If the impurity binds to the nanocrystal surface
too weakly, or if the strongly binding surfaces are only a small fraction
of the total, then doping will be difficult." From calculations based on
this central idea, the team could predict conditions favorable for doping.
Experiments at UMN then confirmed these predictions, including the
incorporation of impurities into nanocrystals that were previously
believed to be undopable. Thus, a variety of new doped nanocrystals may
now be possible, an important advance toward future nanotechnologies.
According to Dr. David Norris, an Associate Professor of Chemical
Engineering and Materials Science at UMN and the lead experimentalist on
the team, "an exciting aspect of these results is that they overturn a
common belief that nanocrystals are intrinsically difficult to dope
because they somehow 'self-purify' by expelling impurities from their
interior. According to this view, the same mechanisms that made it
possible to grow very pure nanocrystals also made it extremely difficult
to dope them. We have shown that doping difficulties are not intrinsic,
and indeed are amenable to systematic optimization using straightforward
methods from physical chemistry."

Future efforts will focus on incorporating impurities which are chosen for
specific applications. For example, solar cells and lasers could benefit
from impurities that add an additional electrical charge to the
nanocrystal. In addition, impurities will be chosen to explore the use of
nanocrystals in spin electronics (or "spintronics"). Spintronic devices
utilize the fact that electrons not only possess charge, but also a
quantum mechanical spin. The spin provides an additional degree of freedom
that can be exploited in devices to realize a host of new spintronic
technologies, from. nonvolatile "instant-on" computers to so-called
"reconfigurable logic" elements whose underlying circuitry can be changed
on-the-fly.
The research was conducted by Dr. Steven Erwin, Dr. Michael Haftel, and
Dr. Alexander Efros from NRL's Materials Science and Technology Division;
Dr. Thomas Kennedy from NRL's Electronics Science and Technology Division;
and Ms. Lijun Zu and Professor David Norris from the Department of
Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of Minnesota.
The Office of Naval Research and the National Science Foundation provided
funding for the research. |