Issue 8, 2019

Biomimetic strategies to produce catalytically reactive CuS nanodisks

Abstract

Copper sulfide materials have diverse applications from cancer therapy to environmental remediation due to their narrow bandgap and easily tuned plasmon. The synthesis of these materials often involves toxic reagents and harsh conditions where biomimetic methods may provide opportunities to produce these structures under sustainable conditions. To explore this capability, simple amino acids were exploited as biological ligands for the ambient synthesis of CuS materials. Using an aqueous-based approach, CuS nanodisks were prepared using acid-containing amino acid molecules that stabilize the materials against bulk aggregation. These structures were fully characterized by UV-vis analysis, transmission electron microscopy, dynamic light scattering, atomic force microscopy, selected area electron diffraction, and X-ray diffraction, which confirmed the formation of CuS. The materials possessed a vibrant plasmon band in the near IR region and demonstrated enhanced photocatalytic reactivity for the advanced oxidation of organic dyes in water. These results demonstrate a room temperature synthetic route to optically important materials, which could have important application in catalysis, optics, nanomedicine, etc.

Graphical abstract: Biomimetic strategies to produce catalytically reactive CuS nanodisks

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 May 2019
Accepted
11 Jun 2019
First published
14 Jun 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nanoscale Adv., 2019,1, 2857-2865

Biomimetic strategies to produce catalytically reactive CuS nanodisks

E. C. Bell, C. J. Munro, Joseph M. Slocik, D. Shukla, A. D. Parab, J. L. Cohn and M. R. Knecht, Nanoscale Adv., 2019, 1, 2857 DOI: 10.1039/C9NA00335E

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