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      Extracting Pure Circular Dichroism from Hierarchically Structured CdS Magic Cluster Films.

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          Abstract

          Chiroptically active, hierarchically structured materials are difficult to accurately characterize due to linear anisotropic contributions (i.e., linear dichroism (LD) and linear birefringence (LB)) and parasitic ellipticities that produce artifactual circular dichroism (CD) signals, in addition to chiral analyte contributions ranging from molecular-scale clusters to micron-sized assemblies. Recently, we have shown that CdS magic-sized clusters (MSC) can self-assemble into ordered films that have a hierarchical structure spanning seven orders of length-scale. These films have a strong CD response, but the chiral origins are obfuscated by the hierarchical architecture and LDLB contributions. Here, we derive and demonstrate a method for extracting the "pure" CD signal (CD generated by structural dissymmetry) from hierarchical MSC films and identified the chiral origin. The theory behind the method is derived using Mueller matrix and Stokes vector conventions and verified experimentally before being applied to hierarchical MSC and nanoparticle films with varying macroscopic orderings. Each film's extracted "true CD" shares a bisignate profile aligned with the exciton peak, indicating the assemblies adopt a chiral arrangement and form an exciton coupled system. Interestingly, the linearly aligned MSC film possesses one of the highest g-factors (0.05) among semiconducting nanostructures reported. Additionally, we find that films with similar electronic transition dipole alignment can possess greatly different g-factors, indicating chirality change rather than anisotropy is the cause of the difference in the CD signal. The difference in g-factor is controllable via film evaporation geometry. This study provides a simple means to measure "true" CD and presents an example of experimentally understanding chiroptic interactions in hierarchical nanostructures.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          ACS Nano
          ACS nano
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1936-086X
          1936-0851
          Dec 27 2022
          : 16
          : 12
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York14853, United States.
          [2 ] School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York14853, United States.
          [3 ] Kavli Institute at Cornell for Nanoscale Science, Ithaca, New York14853, United States.
          [4 ] Department of Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York14853, United States.
          [5 ] Electron Microscopy for Materials Science (EMAT) and NANOlab Center of Excellence, University of Antwerp, 2020Antwerp, Belgium.
          [6 ] Centro de Física de Materiales (CSIC, UPV/EHU) and Materials Physics Center MPC, Paseo Manuel de Lardizabal 5, E-20018San Sebastián, Spain.
          [7 ] Department of Chemistry and Molecular Design Institute, New York University, New York City, New York10003, United States.
          Article
          10.1021/acsnano.2c06730
          36395373
          5ed0307b-03d9-420b-8b25-b7fd2c3b1fa5
          History

          supramolecular chirality control,self-assembly,magic-sized cluster,hierarchical nanostructure,anisotropic circular dichroism,Mueller matrix

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