Ultrasonic Alloying of Preformed Gold and Silver Nanoparticles |
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Authors: | Darya V. Radziuk Wei Zhang Dmitry Shchukin Helmuth Möhwald |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Interfaces Max‐Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces Am Mühlenberg 1, 14476 Golm/Potsdam (Germany);2. Department of Inorganic Chemistry Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society Faradayweg 4–6, 14195 Berlin (Germany) |
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Abstract: | Alloyed gold/silver nanoparticles with a core/shell structure are produced from preformed gold and silver nanoparticles during ultrasonic treatment at different intensities in water and in the presence of surface‐active species. Preformed gold nanoparticles with an average diameter of 15 ± 5 nm are prepared by the citrate reduction of chloroauric acid in water, and silver nanoparticles (38 ± 7 nm) are formed after reduction of silver nitrate by sodium borohydride. Bare binary gold/silver nanoparticles with a core/shell structure are formed in aqueous solution after 1 h of sonication at high ultrasonic intensity. Cationic‐surfactant‐coated preformed gold and silver nanoparticles become gold/silver‐alloy nanoparticles after 3 h of sonication in water at 55 W cm?2, whereas only fusion of isolated gold and silver nanoparticles is observed after ultrasonic treatment in the presence of an anionic surfactant. As the X‐ray diffraction profile of alloyed gold/silver nanoparticles reveals split, shifted, and disappeared peaks, the face‐centered‐cubic crystalline structure of the binary nanoparticles is defect‐enriched by temperatures that can be as high as several thousand Kelvin inside the cavitation bubbles during ultrasonic treatment. |
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Keywords: | alloys core/shell materials gold silver ultrasound |
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