Controlling alloy formation and optical properties by galvanic replacement of sub-20 nm silver nanoparticles in organic media


Autoria(s): Collins, Gillian; McCarthy, E. K.; Holmes, Justin D.
Contribuinte(s)

Science Foundation Ireland

Data(s)

25/01/2016

25/01/2016

01/06/2015

21/09/2015

Resumo

Galvanic replacement is a versatile synthetic strategy for the synthesis of alloy and hollow nanostructures. The structural evolution of single crystalline and multiply twinned nanoparticles <20 nm in diameter and capped with oleylamine is systematically studied. Changes in chemical composition are dependent on the size and crystallinity of the parent nanoparticle. The effects of reaction temperature and rate of precursor addition are also investigated. Galvanic replacement of single crystal spherical and truncated cubic nanoparticles follows the same mechanism to form hollow octahedral nanoparticles, a mechanism which is not observed for galvanic replacement of Ag templates in aqueous systems. Multiply twinned nanoparticles can form nanorings or solid alloys by manipulating the reaction conditions. Oleylamine-capped Ag nanoparticles are highly adaptable templates to synthesize a range of hollow and alloy nanostructures with tuneable localised surface plasmon resonance.

Science Foundation Ireland (SFI/12/RC/2278 )

Submitted Version

Peer reviewed

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

COLLINS, G., MCCARTHY, E. K. & HOLMES, J. D. 2015. Controlling alloy formation and optical properties by galvanic replacement of sub-20 nm silver nanoparticles in organic media. CrystEngComm, 17, 6999-7005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C5CE00659G

17

36

6999

7005

1466-8033

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/2209

10.1039/c5ce00659g

Crystal Engineering Communications

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

The Royal Society of Chemistry

Palavras-Chave #Noble-metal nanoparticles #Hollow gold #Nanostructures #Ag #Nanocrystals #Nanoframes
Tipo

Article (peer-reviewed)