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1.
ACS Mater Lett ; 6(2): 602-610, 2024 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38333598

ABSTRACT

Nature, through billions of years of evolution, has constructed extremely efficient biosystems for transporting, confining, and vaporizing water. Mankind's ability to master water, however, is far from impeccable, and a sustainable supply of clean fresh water remains a global challenge. Here, we learn from Nature and prepare papyrus carbon (PC) from Egyptian papyrus paper as a sustainable solar desalination material. By taking advantage of the capillary pores from vascular bundles that are inherently built for transporting water in plants, PC achieves an evaporation rate of 4.1 kg m-2 h-1 in a passive single-stage device. Raman spectroscopy and thermal calorimetry show that the capillary pores pose a confinement effect to generate loosely hydrogen-bonded intermediate water, which substantially reduces the enthalpy of vaporization, allowing for exceptionally high energy efficiencies. The understanding is applicable to all nature-designed vascular plants and man-made separation and purification systems.

2.
ACS Nano ; 12(9): 9521-9531, 2018 Sep 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30199625

ABSTRACT

Despite the intensive interest in thin gold nanowires for a variety of technologically important applications, key details of the mechanism of their formation and atomic-scale structure remain unknown. Here we synthesize highly uniform, very long, and ultrathin gold nanowires in a liquid-phase environment and study their nucleation and growth using in situ high-energy synchrotron X-ray diffraction. By controlling the type of solvents, reducing agents, and gold precursor concentration, it is shown that the nucleation and growth of gold nanowires involve the emergence and self-assembly of transient linear gold complexes, respectively. In sharp contrast with the face-centered-cubic bulk gold, the evolved nanowires are found to possess a tetrahedrally close packed structure incorporating distorted icosahedra and larger size coordination polyhedra of the type observed with the room-temperature phase of bulk manganese. We relate the complexes to synergistic effects between the selected precursor and reducing agents that become appreciable over a narrow range of their molar ratios. We attribute the unusual structural state of gold nanowires to geometrical frustration effects arising from the conflicting tendencies of assemblies of metal atoms to evolve toward attaining high atomic packing density while keeping the atomic-level stresses low, ultimately favoring the growth of cylindrical nanowires with a well-defined diameter and atomically smooth surface. Our work provides a roadmap for comprehensive characterization and, hence, better understanding of 1D metallic nanostructures with an unusual atomic arrangement and may have important implications for their synthesis and performance in practical applications.

3.
Langmuir ; 33(22): 5456-5463, 2017 06 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28489394

ABSTRACT

Gold nanowires with a mean diameter of 1.7 nm were synthesized by reduction of HAuCl4 in a solution of oleylamine (OY) in hexane. A bilayer of oleylammonium chloride/oleylamine at the surface of the raw nanowires was evidenced by NMR and diffusion ordered spectroscopy (DOSY) experiments. After washing a monolayer of oleylammonium chloride remained at the surface of the nanowires. The oleylammonium chloride layer could be progressively replaced by a phosphine shell as evidenced with NMR and DOSY experiments, which are in good agreement with the adsorption energies given by density functional theory calculations. The nanowires crystallize into hexagonal superlattices with a lattice parameter that can be tailored depending on the ligand shell. Small-angle X-ray scattering showed the following lattice parameters: Au@OY+Cl-(OY) (a = 7.2 nm) > Au@TOPO/OY (a = 6.6 nm) > Au@ OY+Cl- (a = 4.1 nm) > Au@TOP (a = 3.75 nm). This is one of a few examples of surface modification of ultrathin nanowires that does not alter their morphology. Moreover, the nanowires coated with phosphines exhibited long time stability (at the opposite of other ligands like thiols) opening the way to more complex functionalization.

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