Publication | Closed Access
Microbial synthesis of semiconductor CdS nanoparticles, their characterization, and their use in the fabrication of an ideal diode
384
Citations
18
References
2002
Year
Cadmium sulfide nanoparticles were synthesized intracellularly by a Schizosaccharomyces pombe strain when challenged with 1 mM cadmium in solution. The nanoparticles, a known semiconducting material, exhibited an absorbance maximum at 305 nm. X-ray scattering data showed that the nanoparticles had a Wurtzite (Cd(16)S(20))-type hexagonal lattice structure and most of the nanoparicles were in the size range of 1-1.5 nm. The nanoparticles were used in the fabrication of a heterojunction with poly (p-phenylenevinylene). The diode exhibited approximately 75 mA/cm(2) current at 10 V when forward biased and the breakdown occurred at approximately 15 V in the reverse biased mode. These characteristics are considered ideal for a diode.
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