skip to main content


Search for: All records

Award ID contains: 2045258

Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher. Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?

Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.

  1. Abstract

    Assembling 2D‐material (2DM) nanosheets into micro‐ and macro‐architectures with augmented functionalities requires effective strategies to overcome nanosheet restacking. Conventional assembly approaches involve external binders and/or functionalization, which inevitably sacrifice 2DM's nanoscale properties. Noble metal ions (NMI) are promising ionic crosslinkers, which can simultaneously assemble 2DM nanosheets and induce synergistic properties. Herein, a collection of NMI–2DM complexes are screened and categorized into two sub‐groups. Based on the zeta potentials, two assembly approaches are developed to obtain 1) NMI‐crosslinked 2DM hydrogels/aerogels for heterostructured catalysts and 2) NMI–2DM inks for templated synthesis. First, tetraammineplatinum(II) nitrate (TPtN) serves as an efficient ionic crosslinker to agglomerate various 2DM dispersions. By utilizing micro‐textured assembly platforms, various TPtN–2DM hydrogels are fabricated in a scalable fashion. Afterward, these hydrogels are lyophilized and thermally reduced to synthesize Pt‐decorated 2DM aerogels (Pt@2DM). The Pt@2DM heterostructures demonstrate high, substrate‐dependent catalytic activities and promote different reaction pathways in the hydrogenation of 3‐nitrostyrene. Second, PtCl4can be incorporated into 2DM dispersions at high NMI molarities to prepare a series of PtCl4–2DM inks with high colloidal stability. By adopting the PtCl4–graphene oxide ink, various Pt micro‐structures with replicated topographies are synthesized with accurate control of grain sizes and porosities.

     
    more » « less
  2. High entropy alloy (HEA) nanoparticles hold promise as active and durable (electro)catalysts. Understanding their formation mechanism will enable rational control over composition and atomic arrangement of multimetallic catalytic surface sites to maximize their activity. While prior reports have attributed HEA nanoparticle formation to nucleation and growth, there is a dearth of detailed mechanistic investigations. Here we utilize liquid phase transmission electron microscopy (LPTEM), systematic synthesis, and mass spectrometry (MS) to demonstrate that HEA nanoparticles form by aggregation of metal cluster intermediates. AuAgCuPtPd HEA nanoparticles are synthesized by aqueous co-reduction of metal salts with sodium borohydride in the presence of thiolated polymer ligands. Varying the metal : ligand ratio during synthesis showed that alloyed HEA nanoparticles formed only above a threshold ligand concentration. Interestingly, stable single metal atoms and sub-nanometer clusters are observed by TEM and MS in the final HEA nanoparticle solution, suggesting nucleation and growth is not the dominant mechanism. Increasing supersaturation ratio increased particle size, which together with observations of stable single metal atoms and clusters, supported an aggregative growth mechanism. Direct real-time observation with LPTEM imaging showed aggregation of HEA nanoparticles during synthesis. Quantitative analyses of the nanoparticle growth kinetics and particle size distribution from LPTEM movies were consistent with a theoretical model for aggregative growth. Taken together, these results are consistent with a reaction mechanism involving rapid reduction of metal ions into sub-nanometer clusters followed by cluster aggregation driven by borohydride ion induced thiol ligand desorption. This work demonstrates the importance of cluster species as potential synthetic handles for rational control over HEA nanoparticle atomic structure. 
    more » « less
    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 23, 2024
  3. Observations of nanoparticle superlattice formation over minutes during colloidal nanoparticle synthesis elude description by conventional understanding of self-assembly, which theorizes superlattices require extended formation times to allow for diffusively driven annealing of packing defects. It remains unclear how nanoparticle position annealing occurs on such short time scales despite the rapid superlattice growth kinetics. Here we utilize liquid phase transmission electron microscopy to directly image the self-assembly of platinum nanoparticles into close packed supraparticles over tens of seconds during nanoparticle synthesis. Electron-beam induced reduction of an aqueous platinum precursor formed monodisperse 2–3 nm platinum nanoparticles that simultaneously self-assembled over tens of seconds into 3D supraparticles, some of which showed crystalline ordered domains. Experimentally varying the interparticle interactions ( e.g. , electrostatic, steric interactions) by changing precursor chemistry revealed that supraparticle formation was driven by weak attractive van der Waals forces balanced by short ranged repulsive steric interactions. Growth kinetic measurements and an interparticle interaction model demonstrated that nanoparticle surface diffusion rates on the supraparticles were orders of magnitude faster than nanoparticle attachment, enabling nanoparticles to find high coordination binding sites unimpeded by incoming particles. These results reconcile rapid self-assembly of supraparticles with the conventional self-assembly paradigm in which nanocrystal position annealing by surface diffusion occurs on a significantly shorter time scale than nanocrystal attachment. 
    more » « less