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Dive into the research topics where Gerhard Fritz-Popovski is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerhard Fritz-Popovski.


ACS Nano | 2011

Infrared Emitting and Photoconducting Colloidal Silver Chalcogenide Nanocrystal Quantum Dots from a Silylamide-Promoted Synthesis

Maksym Yarema; Stefan Pichler; Mykhailo Sytnyk; Robert Seyrkammer; R. T. Lechner; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Dorota Jarzab; Krisztina Szendrei; Roland Resel; Oleksandra Korovyanko; Maria Antonietta Loi; Oskar Paris; Guenter Hesser; W. Heiss; G. Hesser

Here, we present a hot injection synthesis of colloidal Ag chalcogenide nanocrystals (Ag(2)Se, Ag(2)Te, and Ag(2)S) that resulted in exceptionally small nanocrystal sizes in the range between 2 and 4 nm. Ag chalcogenide nanocrystals exhibit band gap energies within the near-infrared spectral region, making these materials promising as environmentally benign alternatives to established infrared active nanocrystals containing toxic metals such as Hg, Cd, and Pb. We present Ag(2)Se nanocrystals in detail, giving size-tunable luminescence with quantum yields above 1.7%. The luminescence, with a decay time on the order of 130 ns, was shown to improve due to the growth of a monolayer thick ZnSe shell. Photoconductivity with a quantum efficiency of 27% was achieved by blending the Ag(2)Se nanocrystals with a soluble fullerene derivative. The co-injection of lithium silylamide was found to be crucial to the synthesis of Ag chalcogenide nanocrystals, which drastically increased their nucleation rate even at relatively low growth temperatures. Because the same observation was made for the nucleation of Cd chalcogenide nanocrystals, we conclude that the addition of lithium silylamide might generally promote wet-chemical synthesis of metal chalcogenide nanocrystals, including in as-yet unexplored materials.


ACS Nano | 2010

Large-Area Ordered Superlattices from Magnetic Wüstite/Cobalt Ferrite Core/Shell Nanocrystals by Doctor Blade Casting

Maryna I. Bodnarchuk; Maksym V. Kovalenko; Stefan Pichler; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Günter Hesser; W. Heiss

Although a large diversity of single-component and binary superlattices from colloidal nanocrystals have been demonstrated, applications of such ordered nanocrystal assemblies are still hampered due to a lack of control over the self-assembly processes over large areas. A reel-to-reel compatible large-area coating technique for solutions is given by doctor blade casting, which is applied here to deposit colloidal nanocrystals onto various substrates. The self-assembly process is demonstrated for magnetic nanocrystals, having a high potential for applications in magnetic memory devices. Shape-controlled (spherical and cubic) and monodisperse nanocrystals with a Wustite core and a cobalt ferrite shell are used in particular. Doctor blade casting of these colloidal nanocrystals results in films exhibiting hexagonally closely packed arrangements, which are formed by a top-down growth, as is evidenced by cross sectional transmission electron microscopy. The ordering in the topmost layer extends over large areas, although some defects and irregularities are found. The degree and quality of self-assembly is quantified by analyzing plan view images of the assemblies by means of the decay of their autocorrelation function. This analysis reveals that the degree of ordering obtained by doctor blade casting outperforms those provided by alternative deposition techniques such as inkjet printing or drop casting. The results for the coherent lengths deduced from the autocorrelation analysis are shown to be consistent with those from grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering, giving coherence length on the order of 1000 nm.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2011

Dilution induced thickening in hydrotrope-rich rod-like micelles

Gunjan Verma; V. K. Aswal; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Chetan P. Shah; Manmohan Kumar; P. A. Hassan

Dilution induced changes in the microstructure and rheological behavior of micelles formed by a cationic surfactant-anionic hydrotrope mixture has been investigated in the hydrotrope-rich region. The surfactant used is cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and the hydrotropic salt is sodium 3-hydroxy naphthalene 2-carboxylate (SHNC). The concentration of the mixture is varied from 0.5% to 10.0% w/w (φ=0.005-0.100) at a fixed weight ratio of hydrotrope to surfactant (85:15). Rheological studies indicate Newtonian flow behavior at low and high volume fractions (0.005 and 0.100) while a shear thinning behavior is observed at intermediate volume fractions. The zero-shear viscosity η(0) also passes through a maximum upon changes in the concentration. The most striking feature in our study is that a low viscosity Newtonian fluid transforms to a viscoelastic fluid, upon dilution, and then again to a Newtonain fluid. Small angle neutron scattering studies of 10.0% micellar solution show the presence of rod-like aggregates. Upon dilution, the scattering intensity per unit concentration shows an increase in the low q-region. The nature of pair distance distribution function and subsequent model fitting indicates a transition from rod-like micelles to unilamellar vesicles upon dilution. This behavior is explained in terms of the volume fraction dependant solubilization of hydrotropes in the rod-like micelles and consequent changes in the composition of the mixed micelles.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

Structural Characterization of Nonionic Mixed Micelles Formed by C12EO6 Surfactant and P123 Triblock Copolymer

David Löf; Matija Tomšič; Otto Glatter; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Karin Schillén

A structural characterization of mixed micelles formed in aqueous solution by the PEO-PPO-PEO triblock copolymer P123 and the nonionic surfactant C(12)EO(6) was carried out using various techniques, including ultralow shear viscosimetry, depolarized dynamic light scattering (VH-DLS), depolarized static light scattering (VH-SLS), and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). The sphere-to-rod transition of the mixed micelles was studied in a diluted regime (P123 concentrations ranging from 0.5 to 10 wt %) at C(12)EO(6)/P123 molar ratios of 2.2, 3.2, 6.0, and 11 as well as for the pure C(12)EO(6). The data from VH-SLS and viscosimetry displayed a sharp increase in the intensity and viscosity, respectively, at the sphere-to-rod transition, and the results from the two methods were in accordance. In both techniques, an increased transition temperature with increasing content of C(12)EO(6) (in the molar ratio regime from 2.2 to 11) was observed. SAXS was used as the main technique, and a thorough structural characterization was performed, where indirect Fourier transformation (IFT) and generalized indirect Fourier transformation (GIFT) were employed in the analysis procedure of the SAXS data. The p(r) functions obtained from the IFT (employed at low P123 concentrations, i.e., 1.0 and 2.0 wt %) and GIFT (employed above 2.0 wt %) analyses revealed increased inhomogeneities in the mixed micelles when the molar ratio was increased. This suggested that the C(12)EO(6) organized themselves at the interface between the PPO core and the PEO corona of the P123 micelles, with the C(12) alkyl chain stretching into the hydrophobic core and the EO(6) part residing in the hydrophilic corona. The structure factor parameters obtained with GIFT for a molar ratio of 2.2 at a P123 concentration of 5.0 wt % showed radius values smaller than what was estimated from the p(r) functions. This was explained by an interpenetration of the PEO chains from one mixed micelle into a neighboring one. VH-DLS was performed on the mixed micelles at a temperature 3 degrees C above the transition temperature and at a molar ratio of 2.2. From the analyzed data, the average length L of the rods was estimated to be 102 nm.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Investigation of primary crystallite sizes in nanocrystalline ZnS powders: comparison of microwave assisted with conventional synthesis routes.

Thomas Rath; Birgit Kunert; Roland Resel; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Robert Saf; Gregor Trimmel

ZnS powders with primary crystallite sizes of only a few nanometers were prepared by three different synthesis routes at temperatures below 130 degrees C. The reaction of zinc acetate dihydrate with thioacetamide (TAA) in the presence of pyridine and triphenylphosphite (TPP) was carried out using either conventional heating or microwave heating. The obtained powders exhibit sphalerite structure as determined by X-ray diffraction (XRD). The primary crystallites have diameters between 1 and 7 nm obtained by XRD. Small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) measurements were analyzed by the model-free inverse Fourier-transformation approach, as well as by a hard sphere-model from which particle size and polydispersity were extracted. The particle sizes by SAXS are in good agreement with the primary crystallite sizes obtained by XRD. It has been found that an increasing amount of sulfur and/or using microwave heating increases crystallite sizes. The presence of TPP decreases the particle sizes but no significant influence on the TPP concentration was observed. In the alternative third preparation route, hexamethyldisilathiane (HMDST) was used as precipitation reagent at ambient temperature, which leads to the smallest crystallite sizes of only 1 nm together with low polydispersities. Scanning electron microscopy, dynamic light scattering and UV-vis spectroscopy showed that all three synthesis routes lead to ZnS powders with aggregate sizes between 650 and 1200 nm. Both of the TAA-precipitation routes lead to spherical agglomerates which consist of spherical substructures, whereas the HMDST agglomerates are assembled from elongated objects.


Chemistry of Materials | 2014

Crystal Phase Transitions in the Shell of PbS/CdS Core/Shell Nanocrystals Influences Photoluminescence Intensity

R. T. Lechner; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Maksym Yarema; W. Heiss; Armin Hoell; Tobias U. Schülli; Daniel Primetzhofer; M. Eibelhuber; Oskar Paris

We reveal the existence of two different crystalline phases, i.e., the metastable rock salt and the equilibrium zinc blende phase within the CdS-shell of PbS/CdS core/shell nanocrystals formed by cationic exchange. The chemical composition profile of the core/shell nanocrystals with different dimensions is determined by means of anomalous small-angle X-ray scattering with subnanometer resolution and is compared to X-ray diffraction analysis. We demonstrate that the photoluminescence emission of PbS nanocrystals can be drastically enhanced by the formation of a CdS shell. Especially, the ratio of the two crystalline phases in the shell significantly influences the photoluminescence enhancement. The highest emission was achieved for chemically pure CdS shells below 1 nm thickness with a dominant metastable rock salt phase fraction matching the crystal structure of the PbS core. The metastable phase fraction decreases with increasing shell thickness and increasing exchange times. The photoluminescence intensity depicts a constant decrease with decreasing metastable rock salt phase fraction but shows an abrupt drop for shells above 1.3 nm thickness. We relate this effect to two different transition mechanisms for changing from the metastable rock salt phase to the equilibrium zinc blende phase depending on the shell thickness.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Moisture-Driven Ceramic Bilayer Actuators from a Biotemplating Approach

Daniel Van Opdenbosch; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Wolfgang Wagermaier; Oskar Paris; Cordt Zollfrank

The former ovuliferous scales of biotemplated cones of Pinus nigra show moisture-driven actuation similar to their biological templates, demonstrating a facile route to obtain ceramic moisture-sensitive bilayer actuators. Based on comparative analysis of their hierarchical nanometer-precision replica structures, using, e.g., spatially resolved small-angle X-ray scattering, the origin of the actuation is explained.


ACS Nano | 2015

Random Lasing with Systematic Threshold Behavior in Films of CdSe/CdS Core/Thick-Shell Colloidal Quantum Dots

Claudia Gollner; Johannes Ziegler; Loredana Protesescu; Dmitry N. Dirin; R. T. Lechner; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Mykhailo Sytnyk; Sergii Yakunin; Stefan Rotter; Amir Abbas Yousefi Amin; Cynthia Vidal; Calin Hrelescu; Thomas A. Klar; Maksym V. Kovalenko; W. Heiss

While over the past years the syntheses of colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) with core/shell structures were continuously improved to obtain highly efficient emission, it has remained a challenge to use them as active materials in laser devices. Here, we report random lasing at room temperature in films of CdSe/CdS CQDs with different core/shell band alignments and extra thick shells. Even though the lasing process is based on random scattering, we find systematic dependencies of the laser thresholds on morphology and laser spot size. To minimize laser thresholds, optimizing the film-forming properties of the CQDs, proven by small-angle X-ray scattering, was found to be more important than the optical parameters of the CQDs, such as biexciton lifetime and binding energy or fluorescence decay time. Furthermore, the observed systematic behavior turned out to be highly reproducible after storing the samples in air for more than 1 year. These highly reproducible systematic dependencies suggest that random lasing experiments are a valuable tool for testing nanocrystal materials, providing a direct and simple feedback for further development of colloidal gain materials toward lasing in continuous wave operation.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2012

Structural characterisation of alkyl amine-capped zinc sulphide nanoparticles.

Gabriele Kremser; Thomas Rath; Birgit Kunert; Michael Edler; Gerhard Fritz-Popovski; Roland Resel; Ilse Letofsky-Papst; Werner Grogger; Gregor Trimmel

Graphical abstract Highlights ► Combined X-ray and light scattering study was performed on ZnS nanoparticles. ► Ligands with different steric properties, dodecyl- and oleylamine, are compared. ► Nanoparticles exhibit sizes of 3–5 nm. ► Thickness of the ligand shell is about 1.9 nm.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2013

Two-dimensional indirect Fourier transformation for evaluation of small-angle scattering data of oriented samples

Gerhard Fritz-Popovski

An extension of the indirect Fourier transformation method for two-dimensional small-angle scattering patterns is presented. This allows for a model-free investigation of real-space functions of oriented structures. The real-space function is built from two-dimensional basis functions. The Fourier transformed basis functions are approximated to the scattering pattern. The solution to this problem in reciprocal space can be used to compute the corresponding real-space functions. These real-space functions contain information on size, shape, internal structure and orientation of the structures studied. Information on structures that are oriented in different distinct directions can be partly separated. The applicability of the technique is demonstrated on simulated data of oriented cuboids and on two experimental data sets based on the nanostructure of spruce normal wood.

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Gregor Trimmel

Graz University of Technology

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R. T. Lechner

Johannes Kepler University of Linz

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W. Heiss

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Kurt Stubenrauch

Graz University of Technology

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Roland Resel

Graz University of Technology

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Werner Grogger

Graz University of Technology

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Maksym V. Kovalenko

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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