On the Mechanism of Metal Nanoparticle Synthesis in
the Brust–Schiffrin Method
Posted on 2013-08-06 - 00:00
Brust–Schiffrin synthesis
(BSS) of metal nanoparticles has
emerged as a major breakthrough in the field for its ability to produce
highly stable thiol functionalized nanoparticles. In this work, we
use a detailed population balance model to conclude that particle
formation in BSS is controlled by a new synthesis route: continuous nucleation, growth, and capping of particles throughout the synthesis
process. The new mechanism, quite different from the others known
in the literature (classical LaMer mechanism, sequential nucleation–growth-capping,
and thermodynamic mechanism), successfully explains key features of
BSS, including size tuning by varying the amount of capping agent
instead of the widely used approach of varying the amount of reducing
agent. The new mechanism captures a large body of experimental observations
quantitatively, including size tuning and only a marginal effect of
the parameters otherwise known to affect particle synthesis sensitively.
The new mechanism predicts that, in a constant synthesis environment, continuous nucleation–growth-capping mechanism leads
to complete capping of particles (no more growth) at the same size,
while the new ones are born continuously, in principle leading to
synthesis of more monodisperse particles. This prediction is validated
through new experimental measurements.
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Perala, Siva Rama
Krishna; Kumar, Sanjeev (2016). On the Mechanism of Metal Nanoparticle Synthesis in
the Brust–Schiffrin Method. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/la401604q