| Literature DB >> 35281627 |
Mikkel Juelsholt1, Jonathan Quinson1, Emil T S Kjær1, Baiyu Wang1, Rebecca Pittkowski1, Susan R Cooper1, Tiffany L Kinnibrugh2, Søren B Simonsen3, Luise Theil Kuhn3, María Escudero-Escribano1, Kirsten M Ø Jensen1.
Abstract
A surfactant-free synthesis of precious metal nanoparticles (NPs) performed in alkaline low-boiling-point solvents has been recently reported. Monoalcohols are here investigated as solvents and reducing agents to obtain colloidal Os nanoparticles by using low-temperature (<100 °C) surfactant-free syntheses. The effect of the precursor (OsCl3 or H2OsCl6), precursor concentration (up to 100 mM), solvent (methanol or ethanol), presence or absence of a base (NaOH), and addition of water (0 to 100 vol %) on the resulting nanomaterials is discussed. It is found that no base is required to obtain Os nanoparticles as opposed to the case of Pt or Ir NPs. The robustness of the synthesis for a precursor concentration up to 100 mM allows for the performance of X-ray total scattering with pair distribution function (PDF) analysis, which shows that 1-2 nm hexagonal close packed (hcp) NPs are formed from chain-like [OsO x Cl y ] complexes.Entities:
Keywords: metal nanoparticles; osmium; pair distribution function; surfactant-free synthesis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35281627 PMCID: PMC8895034 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.13.17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1TEM micrographs of Os NPs obtained using water (66 vol %) and methanol (33 vol %), no base, and 100 mM of (a) OsCl3 and (b) H2OsCl6 as precursors after a one-week reaction at 85 °C in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) tubes (volume approx. 0.2 mL). The size analysis suggests that the NPs are (a) 1.6 ± 0.4 nm and (b) 1.7 ± 0.3 nm. The size distribution is presented in (c) from the analysis of 103 and 106 NPs, respectively.
Figure 2PDFs obtained from three different syntheses of Os NPs in 1:2 alcohol/water ratios and for different precursors as indicated. The PDFs can be described using a hcp model.
Figure 3Fit of a hcp cluster (seen in the insert) to the PDF obtained from the Os NPs formed in methanol/water from OsCl3.
Figure 4(a) Measured PDF of OsCl3 in methanol/water. The insert shows the same PDF plotted to 21 Å. (b) Overall formation mechanism of the hcp Os NPs. The Os chloride precursor reacts with the alcohol/water mixture to form chain-like structures of [OsOCl]-octahedra, which after a long incubation time form Os NPs. Os, Cl, and O atoms are shown in grey, green, and red, respectively.