A molecular beam of multilayer vanadium-benzene organometallic complexes Vn(C6H6)m was produced by a laser vaporization synthesis method. The magnetic moments of the complexes were measured by a molecular beam magnetic deflection technique, and were found to increase with the number of vanadium atoms in the cluster, showing that the unpaired electrons, which occupy the nonbonding dsigma orbitals localized on the metal atoms, couple ferromagnetically. These sandwich species represent a new class of one-dimensional molecular magnets in which the transition metal atoms are formally zerovalent.
Surfactant-free gold nanoparticles were prepared by laser ablation of a gold metal plate in water. The nanoparticles were characterized by absorption spectroscopy, ζ-potential measurements, and XPS spectroscopy. The nanoparticles are negatively charged because the surface atoms are partially oxidized to Au-O -, according to the literature by Sacher and co-workers (J. Phys. Chem. B, 2004, 108, 16864). We further examined electrostatic interactions between nanoparticle and cationic surfactants. It was found that the surfactant cations attach to the particle surface, neutralizing the particle charge. Taking advantage of the electrostatic interactions, we estimated that 3.3-6.6% of the surface gold atoms was oxidized in water.
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