Colloidal quantum dots, made of semiconductor cores and surface coated with an organic shell, have generated much interest in areas ranging from spectroscopy to charge and energy transfer interactions to… Click to show full abstract
Colloidal quantum dots, made of semiconductor cores and surface coated with an organic shell, have generated much interest in areas ranging from spectroscopy to charge and energy transfer interactions to device design, and as probes in biology. Despite the remarkable progress in the growth of these materials, rather limited information about the molecular arrangements of the organic coating is available. Here, several nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic techniques have been combined to characterize the surface ligand structure(s) on biocompatible CdSe-ZnS quantum dots (QDs). These materials have been prepared via a photoinduced ligand exchange method in which the native hydrophobic coating is substituted, in situ, with a series of polyethylene glycol-modified lipoic acid-based ligands. We first combined diffusion ordered spectroscopy with heteronuclear single-quantum coherence measurements to outline the conditions under which the detected proton signals emanate from only surface-bound ligands ...
               
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