| Literature DB >> 32569441 |
Julian Brunner1, Britta Maier1, Rose Rosenberg1, Sebastian Sturm2, Helmut Cölfen1, Elena V Sturm1.
Abstract
Applications in the fields of materials science and nanotechnology increasingly demand monodisperse nanoparticles in size and shape. Up to now, no general purification procedure exists to thoroughly narrow the size and shape distributions of nanoparticles. Here, we show by analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC) as an absolute and quantitative high-resolution method that multiple recrystallizations of nanocrystals to mesocrystals is a very efficient tool to generate nanocrystals with an excellent and so-far unsurpassed size-distribution (PDIc =1.0001) and shape. Similar to the crystallization of molecular building blocks, nonclassical recrystallization removes "colloidal" impurities (i.e., nanoparticles, which are different in shape and size from the majority) by assembling them into a mesocrystal. In the case of nanocrystals, this assembly can be size- and shape-selective, since mesocrystals show both long-range packing ordering and preferable crystallographic orientation of nanocrystals. Besides the generation of highly monodisperse nanoparticles, these findings provide highly relevant insights into the crystallization of mesocrystals.Entities:
Keywords: analytical ultracentrifugation; mesocrystals; nanocrystals; recrystallization; size separation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32569441 PMCID: PMC7756702 DOI: 10.1002/chem.202002873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236