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1.
Anal Chem ; 93(8): 3987-3996, 2021 03 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33606508

RESUMEN

Highly monodisperse and pure samples of atomically precise gold nanomolecules (AuNMs) are essential to understand their properties and to develop applications using them. Unfortunately, the synthetic protocols that yield a single-sized nanomolecule in a single-step reaction are unavailable. Instead, we observe a polydisperse product with a mixture of core sizes. This product requires post-synthetic reactions and separation techniques to isolate pure nanomolecules. Solvent fractionation based on the varying solubility of different sizes serves well to a certain extent in isolating pure compounds. It becomes tedious and offers less control while separating AuNMs that are very similar in size. Here, we report the versatile and the indispensable nature of using size exclusion chromatography (SEC) as a tool for separating nanomolecules and nanoparticles. We have demonstrated the following: (1) the ease of separation offered by SEC over solvent fractionation; (2) the separation of a wider size range (∼5-200 kDa or ∼1-3 nm) and larger-scale separation (20-100 mg per load); (3) the separation of closely sized AuNMs, demonstrated by purifying Au137(SR)56 from a mixture of Au329(SR)84, Au144(SR)60, Au137(SR)56, and Au130(SR)50, which could not be achieved using solvent fractionation; (4) the separation of AuNMs protected by different thiolate ligands (aliphatic, aromatic, and bulky); and (5) the separation can be improved by increasing the column length. Mass spectrometry was used for analyzing the SEC fractions.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(37): 15799-15814, 2020 Sep 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32881489

RESUMEN

Understanding the evolution of the structure and properties in metals from molecule-like to bulk-like has been a long sought fundamental question in science, since Faraday's 1857 work. We report the discovery of a Janus nanomolecule, Au191(SPh-tBu)66 having both molecular and metallic characteristics, explored crystallographically and optically and modeled theoretically. Au191 has an anisotropic, singly twinned structure with an Au155 core protected by a ligand shell made of 24 monomeric [-S-Au-S-] and 6 dimeric [-S-Au-S-Au-S-] staples. The Au155 core is composed of an 89-atom inner core and 66 surface atoms, arranged as [Au3@Au23@Au63]@Au66 concentric shells of atoms. The inner core has a monotwinned/stacking-faulted face-centered-cubic (fcc) structure. Structural evolution in metal nanoparticles has been known to progress from multiply twinned, icosahedral, structures in smaller molecular sizes to untwinned bulk-like fcc monocrystalline nanostructures in larger nanoparticles. The monotwinned inner core structure of the ligand capped Au191 nanomolecule provides the critical missing link, and bridges the size-evolution gap between the molecular multiple-twinning regime and the bulk-metal-like particles with untwinned fcc structure. The Janus nature of the nanoparticle is demonstrated by its optical and electronic properties, with metal-like electron-phonon relaxation and molecule-like long-lived excited states. First-principles theoretical explorations of the electronic structure uncovered electronic stabilization through the opening of a shell-closing gap at the top of the occupied manifold of the delocalized electronic superatom spectrum of the inner core. The electronic stabilization together with the inner core geometric stability and the optimally stapled ligand-capping anchor and secure the stability of the entire nanomolecule.

3.
Acc Chem Res ; 51(8): 1774-1783, 2018 08 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30027733

RESUMEN

Thiolate-protected gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are a special class of nanomaterials that form atomically precise NPs with distinct numbers of Au atoms ( n) and thiolate (-SR, R = hydrocarbon tail) ligands ( m) with molecular formula [Au n(SR) m]. These are generally termed Au nanomolecules (AuNMs), nanoclusters, and nanocrystals. AuNMs offer atomic precision in size, which is desired to underpin the rules governing the nanoscale regime and factors affecting the unique properties conferred by quantum confinement. Research since the 1990s has established the molecular nature of these compounds and investigated their unique size-dependent optical and electrochemical properties. Pioneering work in X-ray crystallography of Au102(SC6H4COOH)44 and Au25(SC2H4Ph)18- revolutionized the field by providing significant insight into the structural assembly of AuNMs and surface protection modes. Recent discoveries involving bulky and rigid ligands to favor crystal growth as a solution to the nanostructure problem have led to crystal structure determinations of several AuNMs ( n = 18 to 279). However, there are several open questions, such as the following: How does the structure evolve with size? Does the atomic structure determine the properties? What determines the atomic structure? What factors govern the stability: geometry or electronic properties or ligands? Where does the molecule-to-metal transition occur? Answering these questions requires the elucidation of governing rules in the nanoscale regime. In this Account, we discuss patterns and trends observed in structures, growth, and surface protection modes of 4- tert-butylbenzenethiolate (TBBT)-protected AuNMs and others to answer some of the important open questions. The TBBT series of AuNMs comprises Au28(SR)20, Au36(SR)24, Au44(SR)28, Au52(SR)32, Au92(SR)44, Au133(SR)52, and Au279(SR)84, where Au28 to Au133 are molecule-like with discrete electronic structures and Au279 exhibits metal-like properties with a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) at 510 nm. The TBBT series of AuNMs have dihedral symmetry, except for Au133(SR)52, which has no symmetry. We synthesize the scaling law and the rules of surface assembly, one-, two-, and three-dimensional growth patterns, the structural evolution trend, and an overarching trend for diverse types of thiolate-protected AuNMs. This Account sheds light on a new perspective in structural evolution for the TBBT series based on observations, namely, face-centered cubic (FCC) to decahedral to icosahedral to FCC, which contrasts with the contemporary understanding of the structural evolution of naked metal clusters (NMCs) from icosahedral to decahedral to FCC. We also hope that this Account will be of pedagogical value and spur further experimental and computational studies on this wide range of structures to delineate the underlying stability factors in the magic series.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(43): 15450-15459, 2017 11 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28991464

RESUMEN

We report the discovery of an unprecedentedly large, 2.2 nm diameter, thiolate protected gold nanocrystal characterized by single crystal X-ray crystallography (sc-XRD), Au279(SPh-tBu)84 named Faradaurate-279 (F-279) in honor of Michael Faraday's (1857) pioneering work on nanoparticles. F-279 nanocrystal has a core-shell structure containing a truncated octahedral core with bulk face-centered cubic-like arrangement, yet a nanomolecule with a precise number of metal atoms and thiolate ligands. The Au279S84 geometry was established from a low-temperature 120 K sc-XRD study at 0.90 Å resolution. The atom counts in core-shell structure of Au279 follows the mathematical formula for magic number shells: Au@Au12@Au42@Au92@Au54, which is further protected by a final shell of Au48. Au249 core is protected by three types of staple motifs, namely: 30 bridging, 18 monomeric, and 6 dimeric staple motifs. Despite the presence of such diverse staple motifs, Au279S84 structure has a chiral pseudo-D3 symmetry. The core-shell structure can be viewed as nested, concentric polyhedra, containing a total of five forms of Archimedean solids. A comparison between the Au279 and Au309 cuboctahedral superatom model in shell-wise growth is illustrated. F-279 can be synthesized and isolated in high purity in milligram quantities using size exclusion chromatography, as evidenced by mass spectrometry. Electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry independently verifies the X-ray diffraction study based heavy atoms formula, Au279S84, and establishes the molecular formula with the complete ligands, namely, Au279(SPh-tBu)84. It is also the smallest gold nanocrystal to exhibit metallic behavior, with a surface plasmon resonance band around 510 nm.

5.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(15): 6312-6319, 2020 Aug 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32700914

RESUMEN

We report the X-ray crystal structure of the Au30-xAgx(S-tBu)18 alloy and the effect of the ligand on alloying site preferences. Gold-silver nanoalloys prepared by co-reduction of metal salts are known to have only partial Ag occupancies. Interestingly, Au30-xAgx(S-tBu)18 has 100% Ag occupancy at two sites on the core surface as well as partial Ag occupancies on the surface, capping, and staples sites. The Au30-xAgx(S-tBu)18 (x = 1-5) composition was confirmed by X-ray diffraction and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry studies. Thiolate ligands can be categorized into three classes on the basis of the groups at the α-position as aliphatic, aromatic, and bulky thiols. The effect of the ligand on Ag doping can be clearly seen in the crystal structures of Au36-xAgx(SPh-tBu)24 and Au38-xAgx(SCH2CH2Ph)24 when compared with that of Au30-xAgx(S-tBu)18. Ag is preferentially doped onto the core surface when the ligand is aliphatic, and Ag is doped in both core surface and staple metal sites when the ligand is aromatic or bulky.

6.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 9(6): 1295-1300, 2018 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29493241

RESUMEN

We report a detailed study on the optical properties of Au279(SR)84 using steady-state and transient absorption measurements to probe its metallic nature, time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) studies to correlate the optical spectra, and density of states (DOS) to reveal the factors governing the origin of the collective surface plasmon resonance (SPR) oscillation. Au279 is the smallest identified gold nanocrystal to exhibit SPR. Its optical absorption exhibits SPR at 510 nm. Power-dependent bleach recovery kinetics of Au279 suggests that electron dynamics dominates its relaxation and it can support plasmon oscillations. Interestingly, TDDFT and DOS studies with different tail group residues (-CH3 and -Ph) revealed the important role played by the tail groups of ligands in collective oscillation. Also, steady-state and time-resolved absorption for Au36, Au44, and Au133 were studied to reveal the molecule-to-metal evolution of aromatic AuNMs. The optical gap and transient decay lifetimes decrease as the size increases.

7.
Front Chem ; 6: 330, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30131953

RESUMEN

The nature of the ligands dictates the composition, molecular formulae, atomic structure and the physical properties of thiolate protected gold nanomolecules, Aun(SR)m. In this review, we describe the ligand effect for three classes of thiols namely, aliphatic, AL or aliphatic-like, aromatic, AR, or bulky, BU thiol ligands. The ligand effect is demonstrated using three experimental setups namely: (1) The nanomolecule series obtained by direct synthesis using AL, AR, and BU ligands; (2) Molecular conversion and interconversion between Au38(S-AL)24, Au36(S-AR)24, and Au30(S-BU)18 nanomolecules; and (3) Synthesis of Au38, Au36, and Au30 nanomolecules from one precursor Aun(S-glutathione)m upon reacting with AL, AR, and BU ligands. These nanomolecules possess unique geometric core structure, metal-ligand staple interface, optical and electrochemical properties. The results unequivocally demonstrate that the ligand structure determines the nanomolecules' atomic structure, metal-ligand interface and properties. The direct synthesis approach reveals that AL, AR, and BU ligands form nanomolecules with unique atomic structure and composition. Similarly, the nature of the ligand plays a pivotal role and has a significant impact on the passivated systems such as metal nanoparticles, quantum dots, magnetic nanoparticles and self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Computational analysis demonstrates and predicts the thermodynamic stability of gold nanomolecules and the importance of ligand-ligand interactions that clearly stands out as a determining factor, especially for species with AL ligands such as Au38(S-AL)24.

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