Abstract:We demonstrate the facile synthesis of high purity aluminum nanocrystals over a range of controlled sizes from 70 nm to 220 nm diameter, with size control achieved through a simple modification of solvent ratios in the reaction solution. The monodisperse, icosahedral and trigonal bipyramidal nanocrystals are air-stable for weeks, due to the formation of a 2-4 nm thick passivating oxide layer on their surfaces. We show that the nanocrystals support sizedependent ultraviolet and visible plasmon modes, providing a far more sustainable alternative to gold and silver nanoparticles currently in widespread use.
Two synthetic approaches to the formation of bismuth(III) carboxylates have been explored and compared. Ph(3)Bi was reacted with a series of carboxylic acids (RCO(2)H) of varying pK(a) and functionality (R = PhCH[double bond, length as m-dash]CH, o-MeOC(6)H(4), m-MeOC(6)H(4), o-H(2)NC(6)H, o-O(2)NC(6)H(4), p-O(2)NC(6)H(4), 2-(C(5)H(4)N)) under reflux conditions in toluene and solvent-free. The thermochemical profiles of the solvent-free reactions were also studied by DSC-TGA. All reactions produced the tri-substituted bismuth carboxylates in comparable yields and purity with the exceptions of picolinic acid and p-nitrobenzoic acid. 2-Picolinic acid exclusively formed the di-substituted complex, [PhBi(2-(C(5)H(4)N)CO(2))(2)](4), by both methods, while p-nitrobenzoic acid gave the tri-substituted complex through reflux and the di-substituted complex under solvent-free conditions. Two of the complexes were structurally authenticated by single crystal X-ray diffraction: [PhBi(2-(C(5)H(4)N)CO(2))(2)](4) is tetrameric formed through five membered chelate rings involving the pyridyl N and O(-C) rather than the less stable carboxylate (-CO(2)) chelates, while [Bi(o-MeOC(6)H(4)CO(2))(3)](infinity), is a polymer in which dimeric units, constructed around two chelating and one unsymmetrical bridging carboxylate on each Bi centre, are then joined together through longer intermolecular Bi-O bridging bonds.
The synthesis of metal nanoparticles has become a priority for the advancement of nanotechnology. In attempts to create these nanoparticles, several different methods: chemistry, physics, and biology, have all been...
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