| Literature DB >> 25738307 |
Damien Alloyeau1, Walid Dachraoui1, Yasir Javed1, Hannen Belkahla2, Guillaume Wang1, Hélène Lecoq2, Souad Ammar2, Ovidiu Ersen3, Andreas Wisnet4, Florence Gazeau5, Christian Ricolleau1.
Abstract
The growth of colloidal nanoparticles is simultaneously driven by kinetic and thermodynamic effects that are difficult to distinguish. We have exploited in situ scanning transmission electron microscopy in liquid to study the growth of Au nanoplates by radiolysis and unravel the mechanisms influencing their formation and shape. The electron dose provides a straightforward control of the growth rate that allows quantifying the kinetic effects on the planar nanoparticles formation. Indeed, we demonstrate that the surface-reaction rate per unit area has the same dose-rate dependent behavior than the concentration of reducing agents in the liquid cell. Interestingly, we also determine a critical supply rate of gold monomers for nanoparticle faceting, corresponding to three layers per second, above which the formation of nanoplates is not possible because the growth is then dominated by kinetic effects. At lower electron dose, the growth is driven by thermodynamic and the formation and shape of nanoplates are directly related to the twin-planes formed during the growth.Entities:
Keywords: Gold nanoplates; dose rate; growth; in situ liquid transmission electron microscopy; kinetic effects; twinning
Year: 2015 PMID: 25738307 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b00140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189