Enhanced photothermal behavior derived from controllable self-assembly of Cu1.94S microstructures†
Abstract
New ordered architectures or morphologies could be obtained through the self-assembly process and usually generate new physical and chemical properties. Here we report an adjustable self-assembly research study on copper sulphide nanocrystals (Cu1.94S NCs) forming five kinds of plant-like morphologies. Hydrophobic Cu1.94S quantum dots were prepared in the CHCl3 phase and transferred to the aqueous phase and capped with cysteine or penicillamine through a ligand exchange technique. Afterwards, a facile and eco-friendly self-assembly process (without using any template or surfactant) was employed. Through regulating the conditions including the solvent composition, surface ligand and starting concentration of Cu1.94S NCs, five delicate architectures were obtained. In addition, the possible formation process and growth mechanism of the obtained three-dimensional (3D) Cu1.94S architectures was also proposed and discussed. The assembled Cu1.94S architectures show improved molar extinction coefficients compared with individual Cu1.94S NCs, and in this way, better photothermal performance is achieved.