Theme
Crystalline materials with nanometer-scale physical dimensions often display different
                                 properties than bulk crystals of the same compounds, because they are smaller than
                                 characteristic length scales for light absorption and scattering, excited electronic
                                 states, and charge transport (conductivity). This is most readily seen in the size-dependent
                                 absorption and emission spectra of fluorescent semiconductor nanocrystal “quantum
                                 dots.” 
Our group develops surface-sensitive metrics, purification strategies, and synthetic
                                 steps for QDs and other colloidal nanocrystals that permit increasingly precise and
                                 sophisticated control of the resulting physical and chemical properties. We are also
                                 interested in the transport of matter, charge, and energy within nanoscale systems
                                 and across interfaces. We use microfabrication, optoelectronic measurements, and functional
                                 imaging techniques to characterize these transport processes. An ultimate goal of
                                 our work is to improve the performance of QD solar cells and other optoelectronic
                                 devices based on nanostructured materials, and to advancing the biomedical applications
                                 of nanocrystal-based imaging and therapeutic agents. These themes are explored in
                                 three main project areas.
Purification & metrics for sequential chemistry of shell growth and ligand exchange with colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals
Nanocrystal quantum dots (QDs) are soluble, nanometer-scale particles composed of
                                 semiconductor materials. QDs can have size-tunable absorption and fluorescence due
                                 to quantum confinement of states available to electronics within them. Quantum dots
                                 are now ubiquitous in fluorescent backlights for flat panel TVs, computer monitors,
                                 and mobile devices because their narrow emission spectra allow the rendering of highly
                                 saturated colors. However, only a limited understanding exists of many details of
                                 the chemical and physical properties of colloidal quantum dots. A key challenge in
                                 this regard is that colloidal nanocrystals (NCs) such as QDs are complex assemblies
                                 of a crystalline core and an interfacial ligand layer that, given time, may exchange
                                 matter with the solution and other NCs.
Our group has emphasized gel permeation chromatography (GPC) as a general approach
                                 to purification of NCs in anhydrous solvents, by separating the NCs from small molecule
                                 impurities and weakly bound ligands on the basis of size. We are using these purified
                                 QDs to investigate the role of surface ligands in controlling QD brightness and decay
                                 rate dispersion. We are also conducting quantitative investigations of ligand binding
                                 to nanocrystal surfaces, using purified NCs as a well-defined initial state.
We also investigate nanocrystal growth processes, including work on selective ionic
                                 layer adhesion and reaction (SILAR) and related processes for the formation of high
                                 quality core/shell QDs. 
Biomedical applications of nanoparticles with well-defined surface chemistry
Nanoparticles are of interest for a variety of applications in bioimaging, such as
                                 the use of QDs as labels and sensors in fluorescence microscopy, and as therapeutics,
                                 such the use of nanoparticle carriers to overcome limitations of pharmacokinetics
                                 and off-target adverse effects in delivery of drugs to combat cancer and heart disease. 
Key requirements for biomedical applications of nanoparticles are a high degree of
                                 solubility and colloidal stability in water, control of hydrodynamic size, elimination
                                 of non-specific binding, and the ability to append specific targeting groups. Additionally,
                                 advantageous physical properties such as fluorescence or magnetism of the core nanocrystal
                                 must be maintained.
For quantum dots used in bioimaging, the exchange of native hydrophobic ligands for
                                 hydrophilic ligands is a key strategy by which to achieve these requirements. We have
                                 developed a family of methacrylate-based polymeric imidazole ligands (MA-PILs) that
                                 possess multiple imidazole groups that can anchor the ligand to the surface of chalcogenide
                                 QDs. The GPC purification and shell growth expertise developed within the group contribute
                                 to a highly reliable process for formation of QDs with low non-specific binding to
                                 cells and low acute toxicity. We have used these QDs to label the surfaces of enveloped
                                 viruses and track their infection of target cells.
Transport processes in low-dimensional and assembled materials
We use electron and optical microscopy, spectroscopy, and electronic transport measurements
                                 to explore the role of the surface in dictating the properties of semiconductor nanostructures:
                                 recently, this has focused on assembled colloidal nanocrystal films. 
Nanocrystals, including QDs and extended structures such as nanoplatelets and nanorods,
                                 are of interest for solar energy capture in photovoltaic and photocatalytic systems
                                 as they can absorb sunlight at energies above their bandgaps, can be deposited over
                                 large areas on diverse and inexpensive substrates, and exhibit large junction areas
                                 that could increase the rate at which absorbed light is captured as separated charges.
                                 NCs are also of interest for building infrared detection capabilities into large-area
                                 and flexible devices, and NC-crystalline hybrid architectures.
In addition to work on nanoscale semiconductors made in our lab, we investigate transport
                                 processes in a variety of other material systems in collaborative efforts. These systems
                                 include host-guest interactions in self-assembled macrocycle fibers (collaboration
                                 with Prof. Linda S. Shimizu) and energy transfer processes between donor and acceptor
                                 chromophores organized in metal-organic frameworks (collaboration with Prof. Natalia
                                 B. Shustova). We have also used our scanning photocurrent microscopy system to investigate
                                 epitaxial graphene and wide-bandgap carbide, nitride, and oxide-based single crystal
                                 semiconductor devices in collaborations with Profs. MVS Chandrashekhar and Asif Khan
                                 in USC’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computing.