| Literature DB >> 25161861 |
Kathrin Barbe1, Martin Kind1, Christian Pfeiffer2, Andreas Terfort1.
Abstract
Ethanol is the preferred solvent for the formation of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of thiolates on gold. By applying a thin film sensor system, we could demonstrate that even the best commercial qualities of ethanol contain surface-active contaminants, which can compete with the desired thiolates for surface sites. Here we present that gold nanoparticles deposited onto zeolite X can be used to remove these contaminants by chemisorption. This nanoparticle-impregnated zeolite does not only show high capacities for surface-active contaminants, such as thiols, but can be fully regenerated via a simple pyrolysis protocol.Entities:
Keywords: ethanol; gold nanoparticles; purification; self-assembled monolayers; solvent
Year: 2014 PMID: 25161861 PMCID: PMC4142897 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.5.139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Top: Picture of molecular sieve beads (zeolite X) loaded with gold-NPs, from a batch used for ethanol purification, taken with an optical microscope. The inset shows a micrograph of a bead with a fresh breakage at the lower side, the color of which indicates that the NPs are located not only on the surface but also within the beads. Bottom: Scanning transmission electron micrograph of gold-NPs (bright spots) immobilized on zeolite X.
Figure 2Left: Absolute uptake of dodecanethiol in dependence of the molar amount of gold per 1 g of NP-impregnated zeolite. As can be seen, the pyrolysis temperature plays an important role for the uptake capacity. Right: Thiol uptake capacity of 1 g of NP-impregnated zeolite (0.1 mmol Au/g), recycled at different temperatures.
Figure 3Relative change of resistivity of a thin gold film sensor upon immersion into ethanol species of different purity grades at 298 K. The gold surface was immersed into the liquids at 0 seconds. The successive resistivity change indicates chemisorption of contaminant species (or in case of curve A, deliberately dissolved organothiols) in the ethanol samples onto the gold surface (A: 1 µM hexadecanethiol solution in ethanol of type G (see below); B: ethanol, technical grade, 99%, denatured with 1% petrol ether; C: ethanol of type B, distilled before measurement; D: ethanol “pro analysi”; E: ethanol “for spectroscopy”; F: ethanol “HPLC grade”; G: ethanol of type C, purified twice with zeolite-supported Au-NPs).