posted on 2018-12-12, 17:20authored byFang Lu, Huolin Xin, Weiwei Xia, Mingzhao Liu, Yugang Zhang, Weiping Cai, Oleg Gang
Hollow nanoparticles
(NPs) are of broad interest for biomedical,
optical, and catalytic applications due to their unique geometry-related
physicochemical properties. The ability to engineer hollow structures
with surface openings is particularly attractive since emergent properties
are promised by the design of shell porosity and encapsulation of
guest materials. However, it still remains challenging to precisely
control the opening of the hollow structure, in terms of shape, size,
and location. Here, we report a facile one-step strategy
to synthesize a hollow nanostructure with well-defined cubic-shape
openings at the corners, by regulating nanoscale galvanic replacement
processes with specific surface-capping agents. The final product
is a single-crystalline AuAg alloy which morphologically features
three “belts” orthogonally wrapping around a virtual
cube, denoted by nanowrapper. We demonstrate a structural
tunability of our synthetic method for tailoring nanowrapper and the
corresponding tuning of its plasmonic band from the visible to near-infrared
(NIR) range. Advanced electron tomography techniques provide unambiguous
three-dimensional (3D) visualizations to reveal an unconventional
transformation pathway of sharp-cornered Ag nanocube to nanowrapper
and correlate its structure with measured and computed spectroscopic
properties. Importantly, we find that the surfactant, i.e., cetylpyridinium
chloride (CPC), is crucial for the openings to be localized at the
corners of the hollow cube and be tailored to a cubic shape in our
one-step process. Furthermore, such a well-defined hollow architecture
also allows a guest nano-object to be contained within, while the
large openings at corners enable controlled loading/release of nanoscale
cargo, a DNA-coated particle, using change of ionic conditions. This
work expands our understanding of surface engineering in nanoscale
galvanic replacement reactions and opens new ways toward the shape
control of hollow NPs.