Dmitry Baranov
Associate senior lecturer
Synthesis of flexible, ultrathin gold nanowires in organic media
Author
Summary, in English
Gold nanoparticles are very interesting because of their potential applications in microelectronics, optical devices, analytical detection schemes, and biomedicine. Though shape control has been achieved in several polar solvents, the capability to prepare organosols containing elongated gold nanoparticles has been very limited. In this work we report a novel, simplified method to produce long, thin gold nanowires in an organic solvent (oleylamine), which can be readily redispersed into nonpolar organic solvents. These wires have a characteristic flexible, hairy morphology arising from a small thickness (<2 nm) and an enormous length (up to several micrometers), with the possibility of adjusting the dimensions through modification of the growth conditions, in particular, the gold salt concentration. Despite their extreme aspect ratio, the wires are stable in solution for long periods of time but easily break when irradiated with high-energy electron beams during transmission electron microscopy.
Publishing year
2008-09-02
Language
English
Pages
9855-9860
Publication/Series
Langmuir
Volume
24
Issue
17
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
The American Chemical Society (ACS)
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0743-7463