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GrzybowskiBartosz Andrzej

Grzybowski, Bartosz A.
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Charged Metal Nanoparticles for Chemoelectronic Circuits

Author(s)
Zhao, XingGuo, JiahuiXiao, TaoZhang, YuchunYan, YongGrzybowski, Bartosz A.
Issued Date
2019-11
DOI
10.1002/adma.201804864
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/30578
Fulltext
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/adma.201804864
Citation
ADVANCED MATERIALS, v.31, no.45, pp.1804864
Abstract
Although metal nanoparticles (NPs) stabilized with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of various organic ligands have proven useful in applications ranging from chemical sensing, to bionanotechnology, to plasmonics and energy conversion, they have not been widely considered as suitable building blocks of electronic circuitry, largely because metals screen electric fields and prevent electrically tunable conductivity. However, when metal nanoparticles a few nanometers in size are stabilized by charged ligands and placed under bias, the counterions surrounding the NPs can redistribute and establish local electric fields that feed back into the electronic currents passing through the nanoparticles' metallic cores. Herein, the manner in which the interplay between counterion gradients and electron flows can be controlled by using different types of SAMs is discussed. This can give rise to a new class of nanoparticle-based "chemoelectronic" logic circuits capable of sensing, processing, and ultimately reporting various chemical signals.
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
ISSN
0935-9648
Keyword (Author)
chemoelectronic circuitsionic gradientslogic gatesmetal nanoparticlessensors
Keyword
THIN-FILM ASSEMBLIESULTRASENSITIVE DETECTIONGOLD NANOPARTICLESTRANSPORTPHOTOCONDUCTANCENANOCRYSTALSSHELLAUCONDUCTIVITYMONOLAYERS

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