| Literature DB >> 23924847 |
Aiwei Tang1, Yu Wang, Haihang Ye, Chao Zhou, Chunhe Yang, Xu Li, Hongshang Peng, Fujun Zhang, Yanbing Hou, Feng Teng.
Abstract
A one-step colloidal process has been adopted to prepare silver (Ag) and silver sulfide (Ag₂S) nanocrystals, thus avoiding presynthesis of an organometallic precursor and the injection of a toxic phosphine agent. During the reaction, a layered intermediate compound is first formed, which then acts as a precursor, decomposing into the nanocrystals. The composition of the as-obtained products can be controlled by selective cleavage of S-C bonds or Ag-S bonds. Pure Ag₂S nanocrystals can be obtained by directly heating silver acetate (Ag(OAc)) and n-dodecanethiol (DDT) at 200 ° C without any surfactant, and pure Ag nanocrystals can be synthesized successfully if the reaction temperature is reduced to 190 ° C and the amount of DDT is decreased to 1 ml in the presence of a non-coordinating organic solvent (1-octadecene, ODE). Otherwise, the mixture of Ag and Ag₂S is obtained by directly heating Ag(OAc) in DDT by increasing the reaction temperature or in a mixture of DDT and ODE at 200 ° C. The formation mechanism has been discussed in detail in terms of selective S-C and Ag-S bond dissociation due to the nucleophilic attack of DDT and the lower bonding energy of Ag-S. Interestingly, some products can easily self-assemble into two- or three-dimensional (2D or 3D) highly ordered superlattice structures on a copper grid without any additional steps. The excess DDT plays a key role in the superlattice structure due to the bundling and interdigitation of the thiolate molecules adsorbed on the as-obtained nanocrystals.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23924847 DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/24/35/355602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnology ISSN: 0957-4484 Impact factor: 3.874