Ajay Singh
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Ajay Singh.
Nano Letters | 2016
Evan L. Runnerstrom; Amy Bergerud; Ankit Agrawal; Robert W. Johns; Clayton J. Dahlman; Ajay Singh; Sverre M. Selbach; Delia J. Milliron
Defects may tend to make crystals interesting but they do not always improve performance. In doped metal oxide nanocrystals with localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR), aliovalent dopants and oxygen vacancies act as centers for ionized impurity scattering of electrons. Such electronic damping leads to lossy, broadband LSPR with low quality factors, limiting applications that require near-field concentration of light. However, the appropriate dopant can mitigate ionized impurity scattering. Herein, we report the synthesis and characterization of a novel doped metal oxide nanocrystal material, cerium-doped indium oxide (Ce:In2O3). Ce:In2O3 nanocrystals display tunable mid-infrared LSPR with exceptionally narrow line widths and the highest quality factors observed for nanocrystals in this spectral region. Drude model fits to the spectra indicate that a drastic reduction in ionized impurity scattering is responsible for the enhanced quality factors, and high electronic mobilities reaching 33 cm(2)V(-1) s(-1) are measured optically, well above the optical mobility for tin-doped indium oxide (ITO) nanocrystals. We investigate the microscopic mechanisms underlying this enhanced mobility with density functional theory calculations, which suggest that scattering is reduced because cerium orbitals do not hybridize with the In orbitals that dominate the bottom of the conduction band. Ce doping may also reduce the equilibrium oxygen vacancy concentration, further enhancing mobility. From the absorption spectra of single Ce:In2O3 nanocrystals, we determine the dielectric function and by simulation predict strong near-field enhancement of mid-IR light, especially around the vertices of our synthesized nanocubes.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Ajay Singh; Jim Ciston; Karen C. Bustillo; Dennis Nordlund; Delia J. Milliron
The presence of antimony, as a dopant in the colloidal growth reaction for CuIn(1-x)Ga(x)S2 (CIGS) nanocrystals, causes end-to-end fusion of nanorod pairs into nanodumbbells at high yield. The influence of the dopant on shape is indirect; antimony catalyzes the incorporation of gallium, which is found in high concentration at the junction between the fused nanorods.
Angewandte Chemie | 2015
Beth A. Lindquist; Gary K. Ong; Ryan B. Jadrich; Ajay Singh; Heonjoo Ha; Christopher J. Ellison; Thomas M. Truskett; Delia J. Milliron
For colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs), replacement of insulating organic capping ligands with chemically diverse inorganic clusters enables the development of functional solids in which adjacent NCs are strongly coupled. Yet controlled assembly methods are lacking to direct the arrangement of charged, inorganic cluster-capped NCs into open networks. Herein, we introduce coordination bonds between the clusters capping the NCs thus linking the NCs into highly open gel networks. As linking cations (Pt(2+)) are added to dilute (under 1u2005volu2009%) chalcogenidometallate-capped CdSe NC dispersions, the NCs first form clusters, then gels with viscoelastic properties. The phase behavior of the gels for variable [Pt(2+)] suggests they may represent nanoscale analogues of bridged particle gels, which have been observed to form in certain polymer colloidal suspensions.
CrystEngComm | 2014
Kevin M. Ryan; Shalini Singh; Pai Liu; Ajay Singh
In this article we outline the assembly of binary, ternary and quaternary nanorods using three separate protocols. The rods are the important photoabsorbers CdS, CdSexS1−x, CuInxGa1−xS, and Cu2ZnSnS4. In the droplet based assembly, we form either 1D rail-tracks or 2D discs of aligned rods depending on the net charge. In the vial based approach, we demonstrate crystallisation of rods into perfectly faceted hexagons. Finally we use electrophoretic deposition to assemble the charged rods directly at the substrate interface to obtain thin-films consisting of 50 or more nanorod layers obtained with complete orientational order.
Nano Letters | 2017
Ankit Agrawal; Ajay Singh; Sadegh Yazdi; Gary K. Ong; Karen C. Bustillo; Robert W. Johns; Emilie Ringe; Delia J. Milliron
Doped metal oxides are plasmonic materials that boast both synthetic and postsynthetic spectral tunability. They have already enabled promising smart window and optoelectronic technologies and have been proposed for use in surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (SEIRA) and sensing applications. Herein, we report the first step toward realization of the former utilizing cubic F and Sn codoped In2O3 nanocrystals (NCs) to couple to the C-H vibration of surface-bound oleate ligands. Electron energy loss spectroscopy is used to map the strong near-field enhancement around these NCs that enables localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) coupling between adjacent nanocrystals and LSPR-molecular vibration coupling. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy measurements and finite element simulations are applied to observe and explain the nature of the coupling phenomena, specifically addressing coupling in mesoscale assembled films. The Fano line shape signatures of LSPR-coupled molecular vibrations are rationalized with two-port temporal coupled mode theory. With this combined theoretical and experimental approach, we describe the influence of coupling strength and relative detuning between the molecular vibration and LSPR on the enhancement factor and further explain the basis of the observed Fano line shape by deconvoluting the combined response of the LSPR and molecular vibration in transmission, absorption and reflection. This study therefore illustrates various factors involved in determining the LSPR-LSPR and LSPR-molecular vibration coupling for metal oxide materials and provides a fundamental basis for the design of sensing or SEIRA substrates.
Nano Letters | 2015
Gary K. Ong; Teresa E. Williams; Ajay Singh; Eric Schaible; Brett A. Helms; Delia J. Milliron
Assembly of presynthesized nanocrystals by block copolymer micelles can be rationalized by the incorporation of nanocrystals into micellar coronas of constant width. As determined by quantitative analysis using small-angle X-ray scattering, high loading of small nanocrystals yields composites exhibiting order on two length scales, whereas intermediate loading of nanocrystals larger than the coronal width produces single nanocrystal networks. The resulting structures obey expectations of thermodynamically driven assembly on the nanocrystal length scale, whereas kinetically frozen packing principles dictate order on the polymer micelle length scale.
Nano Letters | 2017
Ajay Singh; Gary K. Ong; Matthew R. Jones; Dennis Nordlund; Karen C. Bustillo; Jim Ciston; A. Paul Alivisatos; Delia J. Milliron
Assembly of anisotropic nanocrystals into ordered superstructures is an area of intense research interest due to its relevance to bring nanocrystal properties to macroscopic length scales and to impart additional collective properties owing to the superstructure. Numerous routes have been explored to assemble such nanocrystal superstructures ranging from self-directed to external field-directed methods. Most of the approaches require sensitive control of experimental parameters that are largely environmental and require extra processing steps, increasing complexity and limiting reproducibility. Here, we demonstrate a simple approach to assemble colloidal nanorods in situ, wherein dopant incorporation during the particle synthesis results in the formation of preassembled 2D sheets of close-packed ordered arrays of vertically oriented nanorods in solution.
Nano Letters | 2018
Ajay Singh; Lukas Lutz; Gary K. Ong; Karen C. Bustillo; Simone Raoux; Jean Jordan-Sweet; Delia J. Milliron
Solution processingxa0ofxa0polycrystalline compound semiconductor thin film using nanocrystals as a precursor is considered one of the most promising and economically viable routes for future large-area manufacturing. However, in polycrystalline compound semiconductor films such as Cu2ZnSnS4 (CZTS), grain size, and the respective grain boundaries play a key role in dictating the optoelectronic properties. Various strategies have been employed previously in tailoring the grain size and boundaries (such as ligand exchange) but most require postdeposition thermal annealing at high temperature in the presence of grain growth directing agents (selenium or sulfur vapor with/without Na, K, etc.) to enlarge the grains through sintering. Here, we show a different strategy of controlling grain size by tuning the kinetics of nucleation and the subsequent grain growth in CZTS nanocrystal thin films during a crystalline phase transition. We demonstrate that the activation energy for the phase transition can be varied by utilizing different shapes (spherical and nanorod) of nanocrystals with similar size, composition, and surface chemistry leading to different densities of nucleation sites and, thereby, different grain sizes in the films. Additionally, exchanging the native organic ligands for inorganic surface ligands changes the activation energy for the phase change and substantially changes the grain growth dynamics, while also compositionally modifying the resulting film. This combined approach of using nucleation and growth dynamics and surface chemistry enables us to tune the grain size of polycrystalline CZTS films and customize their electronic properties by compositional engineering.
Angewandte Chemie | 2013
Ajay Singh; Shalini Singh; Sergiu Levcenko; Thomas Unold; Fathima Laffir; Kevin M. Ryan
Chemistry of Materials | 2015
Ajay Singh; Claudia Coughlan; Delia J. Milliron; Kevin M. Ryan