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Dive into the research topics where Mykhailo Sytnyk is active.

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Featured researches published by Mykhailo Sytnyk.


Nature Photonics | 2015

Detection of X-ray photons by solution-processed lead halide perovskites

Sergii Yakunin; Mykhailo Sytnyk; Dominik Kriegner; Shreetu Shrestha; Moses Richter; Gebhard J. Matt; Hamed Azimi; Christoph J. Brabec; J. Stangl; Maksym V. Kovalenko; W. Heiss

The evolution of real-time medical diagnostic tools such as angiography and computer tomography from radiography based on photographic plates was enabled by the development of integrated solid-state X-ray photon detectors, based on conventional solid-state semiconductors. Recently, for optoelectronic devices operating in the visible and near infrared spectral regions, solution-processed organic and inorganic semiconductors have also attracted immense attention. Here we demonstrate a possibility to use such inexpensive semiconductors for sensitive detection of X-ray photons by direct photon-to-current conversion. In particular, methylammonium lead iodide perovskite (CH3NH3PbI3) offers a compelling combination of fast photoresponse and a high absorption cross-section for X-rays, owing to the heavy Pb and I atoms. Solution processed photodiodes as well as photoconductors are presented, exhibiting high values of X-ray sensitivity (up to 25 µC mGyair-1 cm-3) and responsivity (1.9×104 carriers/photon), which are commensurate with those obtained by the current solid-state technology.


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.


Nano Letters | 2013

Tuning the Magnetic Properties of Metal Oxide Nanocrystal Heterostructures by Cation Exchange

Mykhailo Sytnyk; Raimund Kirchschlager; Maryna I. Bodnarchuk; Daniel Primetzhofer; Dominik Kriegner; Herbert Enser; J. Stangl; P. Bauer; Michael Voith; Achim Walter Hassel; Frank Krumeich; Arno Meingast; Gerald Kothleitner; Maksym V. Kovalenko; W. Heiss

For three types of colloidal magnetic nanocrystals, we demonstrate that postsynthetic cation exchange enables tuning of the nanocrystal’s magnetic properties and achieving characteristics not obtainable by conventional synthetic routes. While the cation exchange procedure, performed in solution phase approach, was restricted so far to chalcogenide based semiconductor nanocrystals, here ferrite-based nanocrystals were subjected to a Fe2+ to Co2+ cation exchange procedure. This allows tracing of the compositional modifications by systematic and detailed magnetic characterization. In homogeneous magnetite nanocrystals and in gold/magnetite core shell nanocrystals the cation exchange increases the coercivity field, the remanence magnetization, as well as the superparamagnetic blocking temperature. For core/shell nanoheterostructures a selective doping of either the shell or predominantly of the core with Co2+ is demonstrated. By applying the cation exchange to FeO/CoFe2O4 core/shell nanocrystals the Neél temperature of the core material is increased and exchange-bias effects are enhanced so that vertical shifts of the hysteresis loops are obtained which are superior to those in any other system.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Hydrogen-Bonded Organic Semiconductor Micro- And Nanocrystals: From Colloidal Syntheses to (Opto-)Electronic Devices

Mykhailo Sytnyk; Eric Daniel Głowacki; Sergii Yakunin; Gundula Voss; Wolfgang Schöfberger; Dominik Kriegner; J. Stangl; Rinaldo Trotta; Claudia Gollner; Sajjad Tollabimazraehno; Giuseppe Romanazzi; Zeynep Bozkurt; Marek Havlicek; Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci; W. Heiss

Organic pigments such as indigos, quinacridones, and phthalocyanines are widely produced industrially as colorants for everyday products as various as cosmetics and printing inks. Herein we introduce a general procedure to transform commercially available insoluble microcrystalline pigment powders into colloidal solutions of variously sized and shaped semiconductor micro- and nanocrystals. The synthesis is based on the transformation of the pigments into soluble dyes by introducing transient protecting groups on the secondary amine moieties, followed by controlled deprotection in solution. Three deprotection methods are demonstrated: thermal cleavage, acid-catalyzed deprotection, and amine-induced deprotection. During these processes, ligands are introduced to afford colloidal stability and to provide dedicated surface functionality and for size and shape control. The resulting micro- and nanocrystals exhibit a wide range of optical absorption and photoluminescence over spectral regions from the visible to the near-infrared. Due to excellent colloidal solubility offered by the ligands, the achieved organic nanocrystals are suitable for solution processing of (opto)electronic devices. As examples, phthalocyanine nanowire transistors as well as quinacridone nanocrystal photodetectors, with photoresponsivity values by far outperforming those of vacuum deposited reference samples, are demonstrated. The high responsivity is enabled by photoinduced charge transfer between the nanocrystals and the directly attached electron-accepting vitamin B2 ligands. The semiconducting nanocrystals described here offer a cheap, nontoxic, and environmentally friendly alternative to inorganic nanocrystals as well as a new paradigm for obtaining organic semiconductor materials from commercial colorants.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Reducing charge trapping in PbS colloidal quantum dot solids

Dániel Balázs; Mohamad Insan Nugraha; Satria Zulkarnaen Bisri; Mykhailo Sytnyk; W. Heiss; Maria Loi

Understanding and improving charge transport in colloidal quantum dot solids is crucial for the development of efficient solar cells based on these materials. In this paper, we report high performance field-effect transistors based on lead-sulfide colloidal quantum dots (PbS CQDs) crosslinked with 3-mercaptopropionic acid (MPA). Electron mobility up to 0.03 cm2/Vs and on/off ratio above 105 was measured; the later value is the highest in the literature for CQD Field effect transistors with silicon-oxide gating. This was achieved by using high quality material and preventing trap generation during fabrication and measurement. We show that air exposure has a reversible p-type doping effect on the devices, and that intrinsically MPA is an n-type dopant for PbS CQDs.


ACS Nano | 2014

High Infrared Photoconductivity in Films of Arsenic-Sulfide-Encapsulated Lead-Sulfide Nanocrystals

Sergii Yakunin; Dmitry N. Dirin; Loredana Protesescu; Mykhailo Sytnyk; Sajjad Tollabimazraehno; Markus Humer; Florian Hackl; T. Fromherz; Maryna I. Bodnarchuk; Maksym V. Kovalenko; W. Heiss

Highly photoconductive thin films of inorganic-capped PbS nanocrystal quantum dots (QDs) are reported. Stable colloidal dispersions of (NH4)3AsS3-capped PbS QDs were processed by a conventional dip-coating technique into a thin homogeneous film of electronically coupled PbS QDs. Upon drying at 130 °C, (NH4)3AsS3 capping ligands were converted into a thin layer of As2S3, acting as an infrared-transparent semiconducting glue. Photodetectors obtained by depositing such films onto glass substrates with interdigitate electrode structures feature extremely high light responsivity and detectivity with values of more than 200 A/W and 1.2 × 1013 Jones, respectively, at infrared wavelengths up to 1400 nm. Importantly, these devices were fabricated and tested under ambient atmosphere. Using a set of time-resolved optoelectronic experiments, the important role played by the carrier trap states, presumably localized on the arsenic-sulfide surface coating, has been elucidated. Foremost, these traps enable a very high photoconductive gain of at least 200. The trap state density as a function of energy has been plotted from the frequency dependence of the photoinduced absorption (PIA), whereas the distribution of lifetimes of these traps was recovered from PIA and photoconductivity (PC) phase spectra. These trap states also have an important impact on carrier dynamics, which led us to propose a kinetic model for trap state filling that consistently describes the experimental photoconductivity transients at various intensities of excitation light. This model also provides realistic values for the photoconductive gain and thus may serve as a useful tool to describe photoconductivity in nanocrystal-based solids.


Advanced Materials | 2015

High Mobility and Low Density of Trap States in Dual-Solid-Gated PbS Nanocrystal Field-Effect Transistors

Mohamad Insan Nugraha; Roger Häusermann; Satria Zulkarnaen Bisri; Hiroyuki Matsui; Mykhailo Sytnyk; W. Heiss; Jun Takeya; Maria Antonietta Loi

Dual-gated PbS nanocrystal field-effect transistors employing SiO2 and Cytop as gate dielectrics are fabricated. The obtained electron mobility (0.2 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) ) and the high on/off ratio (10(5) -10(6) ), show that the controlled nanocrystal assembly (obtained with self-assembled monolayers), as well as the trap density reduction (using Cytop as dielectric), are crucial steps for the future application of nanocrystals.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Tuning the Localized Surface Plasmon Resonance in Cu2–xSe Nanocrystals by Postsynthetic Ligand Exchange

Olexiy A. Balitskii; Mykhailo Sytnyk; J. Stangl; Daniel Primetzhofer; H. Groiss; W. Heiss

Nanoparticles exhibiting localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPR) are valuable tools traditionally used in a wide field of applications including sensing, imaging, biodiagnostics and medical therapy. Plasmonics in semiconductor nanocrystals is of special interest because of the tunability of the carrier densities in semiconductors, and the possibility to couple the plasmonic resonances to quantum confined excitonic transitions. Here, colloidal Cu2–xSe nanocrystals were synthesized, whose composition was shown by Rutherford backscattering analysis and electron dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, to exhibit Cu deficiency. The latter results in p-type doping causing LSPRs, in the present case around a wavelength of 1100 nm, closely matching the indirect band gap of Cu2–xSe. By partial exchange of the organic ligands to specific electron trapping or donating species the LSPR is fine-tuned to exhibit blue or red shifts, in total up to 200 nm. This tuning not only provides a convenient tool for post synthetic adjustments of LSPRs to specific target wavelength but the sensitive dependence of the resonance wavelength on surface charges makes these nanocrystals also interesting for sensing applications, to detect analytes dressed by functional groups.


ACS Nano | 2017

Quasi-epitaxial Metal-Halide Perovskite Ligand Shells on PbS Nanocrystals

Mykhailo Sytnyk; Sergii Yakunin; Wolfgang Schöfberger; R. T. Lechner; Max Burian; Lukas Ludescher; Niall A. Killilea; AmirAbbas YousefiAmin; Dominik Kriegner; J. Stangl; H. Groiss; W. Heiss

Epitaxial growth techniques enable nearly defect free heterostructures with coherent interfaces, which are of utmost importance for high performance electronic devices. While high-vacuum technology-based growth techniques are state-of-the art, here we pursue a purely solution processed approach to obtain nanocrystals with eptaxially coherent and quasi-lattice matched inorganic ligand shells. Octahedral metal-halide clusters, respectively 0-dimensional perovskites, were employed as ligands to match the coordination geometry of the PbS cubic rock-salt lattice. Different clusters (CH3NH3+)(6-x)[M(x+)Hal6](6-x)- (Mx+ = Pb(II), Bi(III), Mn(II), In(III), Hal = Cl, I) were attached to the nanocrystal surfaces via a scalable phase transfer procedure. The ligand attachment and coherence of the formed PbS/ligand core/shell interface was confirmed by combining the results from transmission electron microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and powder X-ray diffraction. The lattice mismatch between ligand shell and nanocrystal core plays a key role in performance. In photoconducting devices the best performance (detectivity of 2 × 1011 cm Hz 1/2/W with > 110 kHz bandwidth) was obtained with (CH3NH3)3BiI6 ligands, providing the smallest relative lattice mismatch of ca. -1%. PbS nanocrystals with such ligands exhibited in millimeter sized bulk samples in the form of pressed pellets a relatively high carrier mobility for nanocrystal solids of ∼1.3 cm2/(V s), a carrier lifetime of ∼70 μs, and a low residual carrier concentration of 2.6 × 1013 cm-3. Thus, by selection of ligands with appropriate geometry and bond lengths optimized quasi-epitaxial ligand shells were formed on nanocrystals, which are beneficial for applications in optoelectronics.


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.

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W. Heiss

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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J. Stangl

Johannes Kepler University of Linz

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Dominik Kriegner

Charles University in Prague

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Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci

Johannes Kepler University of Linz

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