Issue 12, 2000

Abstract

Well-defined organic crystals have been grown in inorganic gel coatings with particle sizes in the submicron range and narrow size distributions. The direct characterisation of these hybrid organic–inorganic films by optical confocal microscopy has allowed elucidation of the role of the main experimental parameters such as the nature of the gel precursors or solvents, the organic doping level and the rotation speed of the spin-coating apparatus. This is a one-step process in which nucleation and growth of the organic crystals occur simultaneously with the formation of the gel framework. Nanocrystallisation is optimised through the control of the coupling effect between the three elementary processes: nucleation, growth and matrix polymerisation. The validity and reproducibility of this simple and generic method have been demonstrated through the use of several organic molecules, solvents and silicon alkoxides.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Jun 2000
Accepted
23 Aug 2000
First published
19 Oct 2000

J. Mater. Chem., 2000,10, 2723-2726

Organic nanocrystals grown in sol–gel coatings

N. Sanz, A. Gaillot, Y. Usson, P. L. Baldeck and A. Ibanez, J. Mater. Chem., 2000, 10, 2723 DOI: 10.1039/B004989L

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