Researchers unlock a ‘new synthetic frontier’ for quantum dots

Date posted
Funding Agency
(Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Department of Defense, and the National Science Foundation)

Researchers from the University of Chicago; the University of California, Berkeley; Northwestern University; the University of Colorado Boulder; and  the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory have developed a new technique for growing quantum dots – nanocrystals used in lasers, quantum light-emitting diode (QLED) televisions, and solar cells. The researchers replaced organic solvents typically used to create quantum dots with molten salt – literally superheated sodium chloride of the type sprinkled on baked potatoes. "Sodium chloride is not a liquid in your mind, but assume you heat it to such a crazy temperature that it becomes a liquid … [N]obody ever considered these liquids as media” for the synthesis of quantum dots, said Dmitri Talapin, one of the scientists involved in this study.