| Literature DB >> 20672099 |
Sookyoung Moon1, Shun-Ichiro Tanaka, Tohru Sekino.
Abstract
A monolayer of dodecanethiol-stabilized gold nanoparticles changed into two-dimensional and three-dimensional self-organized structures by annealing at 323 K. Subsequent crystal growth of gold nanoparticles occurred. Thiol molecules, although chemisorbed, form relatively unstable bonds with the gold surface; a few thiols desorbed from the surface and oxidized to disulfides at 323 K, because the interaction energy between thiol macromolecules is larger than that between a thiol and a nanoparticle. The gold nanoparticles approached each other and grew into large single or twinned crystals because of the van der Waals attraction and the heat generated by the exothermic formation of disulfides.Entities:
Keywords: Au; Coalescence; Dodecanethiol; Nanoparticle; Polygon; Self-organization; Surface stabilization
Year: 2010 PMID: 20672099 PMCID: PMC2894088 DOI: 10.1007/s11671-010-9565-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1TEM images of as-prepared 2D-organized gold nanocrystals on amorphous carbon without any heat treatment for various dodecanethiol/gold ratios: a 0.8; b 1.6; c and d 3.2
Figure 2Effect of annealing time on structural development for 2D and 3D gold nanocrystal organization on amorphous carbon: a as-prepared without annealing; annealing at 323 K for b 6 h; c 12 h; d 24 h; e soaked at room temperature for 24 h for a comparison. The dodecanethiol/gold ratio is 1.6
Figure 3TEM image and schematic drawing for the formation of 3D structure (monolayer to multilayer) of gold nanoparticles by low-temperature heat treatment at 323 K for 12 h. The dodecanethiol/gold ratio is 1.6
Figure 4UV–vis spectra of gold nanocrystals: (a) as-prepared and annealed at 323 K for (b) 6 h, (c) 12 h, and (d) 14 h. The dodecanethiol/gold ratio is fixed to 1.6
Figure 5Schematic drawing of plausible mechanism for the 2D organization of thiol-stabilized gold nanoparticles and their coalescence and growth to form larger single and/or twinned crystals