posted on 2017-08-30, 00:00authored byStacy
L. Allen, Jay N. Sharma, Francis P. Zamborini
Here
we describe the effect of aggregation on the oxidation of
citrate-stabilized Au nanoparticles (NPs) attached electrostatically
to amine-functionalized glass/ITO electrodes. When the Au NPs are
attached to the electrode from a solution with pH greater than ∼3.0,
they are well-separated on the electrode and oxidize in bromide-containing
electrolyte at 0.698, 0.757, and 0.943 V (vs Ag/AgCl) for 4, 15, and
50 nm diameter Au NPs, respectively, in line with their size-dependent
oxidation behavior. In solutions below pH 3.0, the Au NPs aggregate
in solution and attach to the electrode in the aggregated form. The
solution UV–vis spectra and scanning electron microscopy images
of the electrodes show clear evidence of aggregation. The oxidation
potential for aggregated 4 and 15 nm diameter Au NPs shifts positive
by a maximum of 230 and 180 mV, respectively. The magnitude of the
shift depends on the extent of aggregation, which was controlled by
the solution pH and time. NP aggregation leads to a significant reduction
in the surface area-to-volume ratio, which is likely responsible for
the positive shift in the oxidation potential. The oxidation potential
does not shift at all for aggregated 50 nm diameter Au NPs.