4.8 Article

Photoluminescence of Fully Inorganic Colloidal Gold Nanocluster and Their Manipulation Using Surface Charge Effects

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 31, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202101549

Keywords

core effect; density functional theory; ligand-free Au nanoclusters; origin of Au nanocluster fluorescence; surface charge; surface effect; ultrasmall gold nanoparticles

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [BA 3580/22-1, PA 794/28-1]
  2. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) [05K19GU5]

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This study successfully synthesized fully inorganic colloidal gold nanoclusters with size control and monomodal particle size distribution using liquid-phase laser fragmentation, and found that these NCs exhibit highly pronounced photoluminescence with a quantum yield of 2%. The research also experimentally verified the relationship between emission behavior and surface charge density.
Fully inorganic, colloidal gold nanoclusters (NCs) constitute a new class of nanomaterials that are clearly distinguishable from their commonly studied metal-organic ligand-capped counterparts. As their synthesis by chemical methods is challenging, details about their optical properties remain widely unknown. In this work, laser fragmentation in liquids is performed to produce fully inorganic and size-controlled colloidal gold NCs with monomodal particle size distributions and an fcc-like structure. Results reveal that these NCs exhibit highly pronounced photoluminescence with quantum yields of 2%. The emission behavior of small (2-2.5 nm) and ultrasmall (<1 nm) NCs is significantly different and dominated by either core- or surface-based emission states. It is further verified that emission intensities are a function of the surface charge density, which is easily controllable by the pH of the surrounding medium. This experimentally observed correlation between surface charge and photoluminescence emission intensity is confirmed by density functional theoretical simulations, demonstrating that fully inorganic NCs provide an appropriate material to bridge the gap between experimental and computational studies of NCs. The presented study deepens the understanding of electronic structures in fully inorganic colloidal gold NCs and how to systematically tune their optical properties via surface charge density and particle size.

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