Danylo Zherebetskyy
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Danylo Zherebetskyy.
Science | 2014
Hong-Gang Liao; Danylo Zherebetskyy; Huolin L. Xin; Cory Czarnik; Peter Ercius; Hans Elmlund; Ming Pan; Lin Wang Wang; Haimei Zheng
Watching platinum nanocube growth Size and shape drive the properties of metal nanoparticles. Understanding the factors that affect their growth is central to making use of the particles in a range of applications. Liao et al. tracked the growth of platinum nanoparticle shapes at high resolution using state-of-the-art liquid cells for in situ monitoring inside an electron microscope. The authors tracked changes in the growth rates at different crystal facets caused by differences in the mobility of the capping ligand. Science, this issue p. 916 Observation of atomic facet development during platinum nanocube growth reveals shape control. An understanding of how facets of a nanocrystal develop is critical for controlling nanocrystal shape and designing novel functional materials. However, the atomic pathways of nanocrystal facet development are mostly unknown because of the lack of direct observation. We report the imaging of platinum nanocube growth in a liquid cell using transmission electron microscopy with high spatial and temporal resolution. The growth rates of all low index facets are similar until the {100} facets stop growth. The continuous growth of the rest facets leads to a nanocube. Our calculation shows that the much lower ligand mobility on the {100} facets is responsible for the arresting of {100} growing facets. These findings shed light on nanocrystal shape-control mechanisms and future design of nanomaterials.
Science | 2014
Danylo Zherebetskyy; Marcus Scheele; Yingjie Zhang; Noah D. Bronstein; Christopher Thompson; David Britt; Miquel Salmeron; Paul Alivisatos; Lin-Wang Wang
Nanoparticle lattices and surfaces The challenge of resolving the details of the surfaces or assemblies of colloidal semiconductor nanoparticles can be overcome if several characterization methods are used (see the Perspective by Boles and Talapin). Boneschanscher et al. examined honeycomb superlattices of lead selenide nanocrystals formed by the bonding of crystal faces using several methods, including high-resolution electron microscopy and tomography. The structure had octahedral symmetry with the nanocrystals distorted through “necking”: the expansion of the contact points between the nanocrystals. Zherebetskyy et al. used a combination of theoretical calculations and spectroscopic methods to study the surface layer of lead sulfide nanocrystals synthesized in water. In addition to the oleic acid groups that capped the nanocrystals, hydroxyl groups were present as well. Science, this issue p. 1377, p. 1380; see also p. 1340 The surfaces of lead sulfide nanocrystals capped with an organic acid can also bear hydroxyl groups. [Also see Perspective by Boles and Talapin] Controlling the structure of colloidal nanocrystals (NCs) is key to the generation of their complex functionality. This requires an understanding of the NC surface at the atomic level. The structure of colloidal PbS NCs passivated with oleic acid has been studied theoretically and experimentally. We show the existence of surface OH– groups, which play a key role in stabilizing the PbS(111) facets, consistent with x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy as well as other spectroscopic and chemical experiments. The role of water in the synthesis process is also revealed. Our model, along with existing observations of NC surface termination and passivation by ligands, helps to explain and predict the properties of NCs and their assemblies.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Bo He; Andrew B. Pun; Danylo Zherebetskyy; Yao Liu; Feng Liu; Liana M. Klivansky; Alexandra M. McGough; Benjamin A. Zhang; Kelvin Lo; Thomas P. Russell; Lin-Wang Wang; Yi Liu
A novel electron acceptor was synthesized from one-step functionalization of the readily available indigo dye. The resulting bay-annulated indigo (BAI) was utilized for the preparation of a series of novel donor-acceptor small molecules and polymers. As revealed experimentally and by theoretical calculations, substituted BAIs have stronger electron accepting characteristics when compared to several premier electron deficient building blocks. As a result, the donor-acceptor materials incorporating BAI acceptor possess low-lying LUMO energy levels and small HOMO-LUMO gaps. In situ grazing incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering studies of the thin films of BAI donor-acceptor polymers indicated improved crystallinity upon thermal treatment. Field effect transistors based on these polymers show excellent ambipolar transporting behavior, with the hole and electron mobilities reaching 1.5 and 0.41 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1), respectively, affirming BAI as a potent electron accepting unit for high performance organic electronic materials.
Science | 2016
Baran Eren; Danylo Zherebetskyy; Laerte L. Patera; Cheng Hao Wu; Hendrik Bluhm; Cristina Africh; Lin-Wang Wang; Gabor A. Somorjai; Miquel Salmeron
Nanoclusters just by adding CO The most closely packed surfaces of transition metals are usually stable under vacuum, but during catalytic reactions, energetic changes that result from adsorbing molecules could change the surface structure. Eren et al. present an extreme example for carbon monoxide (CO) adsorption on the (111) surface of copper at very low partial pressures. The surface decomposed into small nanoclusters (most containing 3 or 19 atoms). The surface was more reactive than the original and, for example, could dissociate adsorbed water at room temperature. Science, this issue p. 475 The Cu(111) surface decomposes into nanoclusters under CO at pressures in the Torr range at room temperature. The (111) surface of copper (Cu), its most compact and lowest energy surface, became unstable when exposed to carbon monoxide (CO) gas. Scanning tunneling microscopy revealed that at room temperature in the pressure range 0.1 to 100 Torr, the surface decomposed into clusters decorated by CO molecules attached to edge atoms. Between 0.2 and a few Torr CO, the clusters became mobile in the scale of minutes. Density functional theory showed that the energy gain from CO binding to low-coordinated Cu atoms and the weakening of binding of Cu to neighboring atoms help drive this process. Particularly for softer metals, the optimal balance of these two effects occurs near reaction conditions. Cluster formation activated the surface for water dissociation, an important step in the water-gas shift reaction.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Hailiang Wang; András Sápi; Christopher Thompson; Fudong Liu; Danylo Zherebetskyy; James M. Krier; Lindsay M. Carl; Xiaojun Cai; Lin-Wang Wang; Gabor A. Somorjai
We synthesize platinum nanoparticles with controlled average sizes of 2, 4, 6, and 8 nm and use them as model catalysts to study isopropanol oxidation to acetone in both the liquid and gas phases at 60 °C. The reaction at the solid/liquid interface is 2 orders of magnitude slower than that at the solid/gas interface, while catalytic activity increases with the size of platinum nanoparticles for both the liquid-phase and gas-phase reactions. The activation energy of the gas-phase reaction decreases with the platinum nanoparticle size and is in general much higher than that of the liquid-phase reaction which is largely insensitive to the size of catalyst nanoparticles. Water substantially promotes isopropanol oxidation in the liquid phase. However, it inhibits the reaction in the gas phase. The kinetic results suggest different mechanisms between the liquid-phase and gas-phase reactions, correlating well with different orientations of IPA species at the solid/liquid interface vs the solid/gas interface as probed by sum frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy under reaction conditions and simulated by computational calculations.
Nano Letters | 2015
Jiaxin Zheng; Yuyang Hou; Yandong Duan; Xiaohe Song; Yi Wei; Tongchao Liu; Jiangtao Hu; Hua Guo; Zengqing Zhuo; Lili Liu; Zheng Chang; Xiaowei Wang; Danylo Zherebetskyy; Yanyan Fang; Yuan Lin; Kang Xu; Lin-Wang Wang; Yuping Wu; Feng Pan
LiFePO4 has long been held as one of the most promising battery cathode for its high energy storage capacity. Meanwhile, although extensive studies have been conducted on the interfacial chemistries in Li-ion batteries,1-3 little is known on the atomic level about the solid-liquid interface of LiFePO4/electrolyte. Here, we report battery cathode consisted with nanosized LiFePO4 particles in aqueous electrolyte with an high charging and discharging rate of 600 C (3600/600 = 6 s charge time, 1 C = 170 mAh g(-1)) reaching 72 mAh g(-1) energy storage (42% of the theoretical capacity). By contrast, the accessible capacity sharply decreases to 20 mAh g(-1) at 200 C in organic electrolyte. After a comprehensive electrochemistry tests and ab initio calculations of the LiFePO4-H2O and LiFePO4-EC (ethylene carbonate) systems, we identified the transient formation of a Janus hydrated interface in the LiFePO4-H2O system, where the truncated symmetry of solid LiFePO4 surface is compensated by the chemisorbed H2O molecules, forming a half-solid (LiFePO4) and half-liquid (H2O) amphiphilic coordination environment that eases the Li desolvation process near the surface, which makes a fast Li-ion transport across the solid/liquid interfaces possible.
ACS Nano | 2014
Marcus Scheele; David Hanifi; Danylo Zherebetskyy; Slim Chourou; Stephanus Axnanda; Benjamin J. Rancatore; Kari Thorkelsson; Ting Xu; Zhi Liu; Lin-Wang Wang; Yi Liu; A. Paul Alivisatos
We fabricate a field-effect transistor by covalently functionalizing PbS nanoparticles with tetrathiafulvalenetetracarboxylate. Following experimental results from cyclic voltammetry and ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, we postulate a near-resonant alignment of the PbS 1Sh state and the organic HOMO, which is confirmed by atomistic calculations. Considering the large width of interparticle spacing, we observe an abnormally high field-effect hole mobility, which we attribute to the postulated resonance. In contrast to nanoparticle devices coupled through common short-chained ligands, our system maintains a large degree of macroscopic order as revealed by X-ray scattering. This provides a different approach to the design of hybrid organic-inorganic nanomaterials, circumvents the problem of phase segregation, and holds for versatile ways to design ordered, coupled nanoparticle thin films.
Nano Letters | 2015
Yingjie Zhang; Danylo Zherebetskyy; Noah D. Bronstein; Sara Barja; Leonid Lichtenstein; David Schuppisser; Lin-Wang Wang; A. Paul Alivisatos; Miquel Salmeron
Charge hopping and percolation in quantum dot (QD) solids has been widely studied, but the microscopic nature of the percolation process is not understood or determined. Here we present the first imaging of the charge percolation pathways in two-dimensional PbS QD arrays using Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM). We show that under dark conditions electrons percolate via in-gap states (IGS) instead of the conduction band, while holes percolate via valence band states. This novel transport behavior is explained by the electronic structure and energy level alignment of the individual QDs, which was measured by scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS). Chemical treatments with hydrazine can remove the IGS, resulting in an intrinsic defect-free semiconductor, as revealed by STS and surface potential spectroscopy. The control over IGS can guide the design of novel electronic devices with impurity conduction, and photodiodes with controlled doping.
ACS Nano | 2015
Yingjie Zhang; Danylo Zherebetskyy; Noah D. Bronstein; Sara Barja; Leonid Lichtenstein; A. Paul Alivisatos; Lin-Wang Wang; Miquel Salmeron
Artificial solids composed of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) are being developed for large-area electronic and optoelectronic applications, but these materials often have defect-induced in-gap states (IGS) of unknown chemical origin. Here we performed scanning probe based spectroscopic analysis and density functional theory calculations to determine the nature of such states and their electronic structure. We found that IGS near the valence band occur frequently in the QDs except when treated with reducing agents. Calculations on various possible defects and chemical spectroscopy revealed that molecular oxygen is most likely at the origin of these IGS. We expect this impurity-induced deep IGS to be a common occurrence in ionic semiconductors, where the intrinsic vacancy defects either do not produce IGS or produce shallow states near band edges. Ionic QDs with surface passivation to block impurity adsorption are thus ideal for high-efficiency optoelectronic device applications.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015
Danylo Zherebetskyy; Yingjie Zhang; Miquel Salmeron; Lin-Wang Wang
Colloidal quantum dots exhibit various defects and deviations from ideal structures due to kinetic processes, although their band gap frequently remains open and clean. In this Letter, we computationally investigate intrinsic defects in a real-size PbS quantum dot passivated with realistic Cl-ligands. We show that the colloidal intrinsic defects are ionic in nature. Unlike previous computational results, we find that even nonideal, atomically nonstoichiometric quantum dots have a clean band gap without in-gap-states provided that quantum dots satisfy electronic stoichiometry.