4.2 Article

Synthesis of gold, platinum, and gold-platinum alloy nanoparticle colloids with high-power megahertz-repetition-rate lasers: the importance of the beam guidance method

Journal

APPLIED NANOSCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 1303-1312

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s13204-021-01693-y

Keywords

Ablation; AuPt; Polygon; Productivity; Galvanometer; Scan

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL
  2. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [03SF0497B]
  3. German Research Foundation (DFG) [GO 2566/7-1]

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Noble metal nanoparticles and their alloys are important for biomedicine and catalysis, and laser ablation in liquids is a method used to access high-purity colloids, although current productivity may hinder industrial implementation. Innovative laser technology may help distribute this method further. A comparison of galvanometer scanning and polygon-wheel scanning found that the scan pattern dimensions are crucial, with a threshold pattern length determining the more productive technology. Gold ablation had lower productivity compared to platinum, but alloying gold with 10% platinum improved productivity to nearly the same level as pure platinum.
Nanoparticles of noble metals and their alloys are of particular interest for biomedicine and catalysis applications. The method of laser ablation of bulk metals in liquids gives facile access to such particles as high-purity colloids and is already used in industrial research. However, the method still lacks sufficient productivity for industrial implementation into series production. The use of innovative laser technology may help to further disseminate this colloid synthesis method in the near future. Ultrashort-pulsed lasers with high powers and megahertz-repetition-rates became available recently, but place high demands on the accurate optical laser pulse delivery on the target. Full lateral pulse separation is necessary to avoid a reduction of nanoparticle productivity due to pulse shielding. In this study, we compare flexible but rather slow galvanometer scanning with much faster but more expensive polygon-wheel scanning in their performance in the production of colloidal nanoparticles by laser ablation in liquid. Both beam guidance technologies are applied in the laser ablation of gold, platinum, and a gold-rich platinum alloy in micromolar saline water. We found that the dimensions of the scan pattern are crucial. A threshold pattern length exists, at which one scan technology becomes more productive than the other one. In addition, a much lower productivity was found for the ablation of gold compared to that of platinum. Alloying gold with only 10 at.% of platinum improved the productivity nearly to the level of platinum, reaching 8.3 g/h.

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