The mean size of the gold (Au) core in the synthesis of
dodecanethiolate-stabilized Au cluster compounds
can be finely adjusted by choice of the Au:dodecanethiolate ratio and
the temperature and rate at which
the reduction is conducted. The Au clusters have been examined
with a large number of independent
analytical tools, producing a remarkably consistent picture of these
materials. Average cluster and core
dimensions, as ascertained by 1H NMR line broadening,
high-resolution transmission electron microscopy,
small-angle X-ray scattering, and thermogravimetric analysis, vary
between diameters of 1.5 and 5.2 nm
(∼110−4800 Au atoms/core). The electronic properties of the Au
core were examined by UV/vis and X-ray
photoelectron spectroscopy; the core appears to remain largely metallic
in nature even at the smallest core
sizes examined. The alkanethiolate monolayer stabilizing the Au
core ranges with core size from ∼53 to
nearly 520 ligands/core, and was probed by Fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy, differential scanning
calorimetry, contact-angle measurements, and thermal desorption mass
spectrometry. The dodecanethiolate
monolayer on small and large core clusters exhibits discernable
differences; the line dividing “3-dimensional”
monolayers and those resembling self-assembled monolayers on flat Au
(2-dimensional monolayers) occurs
at clusters with ∼4.4 nm core diameters.
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