Spectroscopy of a single Sb2Se3 nanorod

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Abstract

In this paper, we present solvothermal methods to chemically synthesize Sb2Se3 nanorods using dialkyl diselenophosphate (dsep) complexes of antimony. Energy-dispersive X-ray analysis shows the products are phase pure. We have also studied the Raman and photoluminescence spectroscopy of a single Sb2Se3 nanorod with an average size of 60 nm in diameter and a length less than 1 |μm. Techniques have been devised to immobilize and allocate a single nano-object on an electron beam (E-beam) patterned smart substrate with metallic coordination markers. This also overcomes the limitation of spatial resolution of conventional optical techniques (∼1 |jm) to perform optical spectroscopy on an individual nano-object less than 100 nm in size. Raman spectroscopy reveals that Sb 2Se3 nanorods synthesized at a lower temperature contain a small amount of Sb2Se3. The broad linewidth observed in luminescence spectra from a single rod is attributed to the increasing number of surface defects, impurities, and dangle bonds attached on the surface as the nanoparticle size reduced to nanometer scale. © 2009 IUPAC.

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APA

Sun, K. W., Yang, C. H., Ko, T. Y., Chang, H. W., & Liu, C. W. (2009). Spectroscopy of a single Sb2Se3 nanorod. In Pure and Applied Chemistry (Vol. 81, pp. 1511–1522). https://doi.org/10.1351/PAC-CON-08-08-34

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