Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.139, No.8, 3227-3236, 2017
Tight Binding of Carboxylate, Phosphonate, and Carbamate Anions to Stoichiometric CdSe Nanocrystals
To completely displace the carboxylate surface ligands from cadmium selenide nanocrystals, oleic acid impurities are first removed using dimethylcadmium or diethylzinc. In addition to metal carboxylate and methane coproducts, reactions with CdMe2 produce surface bound methyl groups (delta = 0.4 ppm, 0.04-0.22 nm(-2)) that photolytically dissociate to methyl radicals and n-doped nanocrystals. Without oleic acid impurities, cadmium carboxylate can be completely displaced from the surface using n-alkylamines (NH2R', R' = n-butyl, n-hexyl, n-octyl) (<= 0.01 carboxylates nm(-2)). Colloidal dispersions of amine bound nanocrystals (CdSe NH2R') are indefinitely stable at amine concentrations of 0.1 M or higher and slowly aggregate at lower concentrations. Dissociation and evaporation of the amine ligands in 4-ethylpyridine, tri-n-butylphosphine, or molten tri-n-octylphosphine oxide solution results in nanocrystal aggregation. CdSe-NH2R' reacts with oleic acid, n-octadecylphosphonic acid, or carbon dioxide to form surface bound n-alkylammonium oleate, phosphonate, and carbamate ion pairs that bind with greater affinity than primary n-alkylamines. The results indicate that nanocrystal dispersions solely stabilized by neutral donor ligands are relatively unstable compared to those stabilized by adsorbed metal carboxylate or phosphonate complexes or by ion pairs. The challenge of differentiating between the neutral ligand bound form and adsorbed ion pairs is discussed.