期刊
LANGMUIR
卷 30, 期 9, 页码 2490-2497出版社
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la404618r
关键词
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资金
- NSF [1255519]
- Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
- Division Of Chemistry [1255519] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
Gold nanomolecules with a precise number of gold atoms and ligands have promise for catalytic, optical, and biomedical applications. For practical applications, it is essential to develop synthetic protocols to prepare monodisperse gold nanomolecules. A typical synthesis yields a number of nanomolecules with discrete numbers of core atoms. Thermochemical treatment in the presence of excess thiol, etching, is known to narrow down the number of discrete nanomolecules, by selective degradation of sizes with lower stability. Au-38(SR)(24) and Au-40(SR)(24) are abundantly formed in these etching reactions due to their extraordinary stability to chemical etching. These nanomolecules are of high interest due in part to its stability, X-ray crystallographic structure availability (Au-38), and intrinsic chirality arising from the arrangement of the Au-SR interface. However, the synthetic routes typically yield a mixture of Au-38 and Au-40 demanding extensive separation protocols. Here, we present a synthetic route to prepare either Au-38 or Au-40 exclusively in the product of etching. This was made possible by conducting a comprehensive mechanistic study starting from single-sized reactant. Au-67 on etching yields Au-40 exclusively. Au103-105(SR)(45-46) on etching also yields Au-40 exclusively. Clusters of various sizes smaller than Au-67 on etching yield Au-38 exclusively. This is the first direct evidence for the exclusive formation of Au-38 and Au-40 nanomolecules by core size conversion. Mass spectrometry was used to study the core size conversion reactions to understand the mechanism. Au-38 and Au-40 nanomolecules form via different intermediates, as observed in the mass spectrometry data.
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