Volume 152, 2011

The active site behaviour of electrochemically synthesised gold nanomaterials

Abstract

Even though gold is the noblest of metals, a weak chemisorber and is regarded as being quite inert, it demonstrates significant electrocatalytic activity in its nanostructured form. It is demonstrated here that nanostructured and even evaporated thin films of gold are covered with active sites which are responsible for such activity. The identification of these sites is demonstrated with conventional electrochemical techniques such as cyclic voltammetry as well as a large amplitude Fourier transformed alternating current (FT-ac) method under acidic and alkaline conditions. The latter technique is beneficial in determining if an electrode process is either Faradaic or capacitive in nature. The observed behaviour is analogous to that observed for activated gold electrodes whose surfaces have been severely disrupted by cathodic polarisation in the hydrogen evolution region. It is shown that significant electrochemical oxidation responses occur at discrete potential values well below that for the formation of the compact monolayer oxide of bulk gold and are attributed to the facile oxidation of surface active sites. Several electrocatalytic reactions are explored in which the onset potential is determined by the presence of such sites on the surface. Significantly, the facile oxidation of active sites is used to drive the electroless deposition of metals such as platinum, palladium and silver from their aqueous salts on the surface of gold nanostructures. The resultant surface decoration of gold with secondary metal nanoparticles not only indicates regions on the surface which are rich in active sites but also provides a method to form interesting bimetallic surfaces.

  • This article is part of the themed collection: Gold

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Feb 2011
Accepted
03 Mar 2011
First published
28 Jul 2011

Faraday Discuss., 2011,152, 43-62

The active site behaviour of electrochemically synthesised gold nanomaterials

B. J. Plowman, A. P. O'Mullane and S. K. Bhargava, Faraday Discuss., 2011, 152, 43 DOI: 10.1039/C1FD00017A

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