Shumeng
Zhang‡
a,
Lei
Zhang‡
a,
Kai
Liu
a,
Moxuan
Liu
a,
Yadong
Yin
b and
Chuanbo
Gao
*a
aFrontier Institute of Science and Technology, and State Key Laboratory of Multiphase Flow in Power Engineering, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an, Shaanxi 710054, China. E-mail: gaochuanbo@mail.xjtu.edu.cn
bDepartment of Chemistry, University of California, Riverside, California 92521, USA
First published on 16th April 2018
Digestive ripening is a unique process in colloidal synthesis that can enable direct conversion of polydisperse nanoparticles into monodisperse ones. However, such a strategy usually relies on strongly coordinating ligands such as alkylthiols to initiate etching and stabilize the surfaces and thus affords nanoparticles with hydrophobic and passivated surfaces, which greatly limits their applications. In this work, we report that digestive ripening can be achieved by decoupling the etching and surface stabilization functions using two independent chemical agents, allowing the use of considerably weak capping ligands which are hydrophilic and can be replaced later according to the need of the specific applications. As a proof-of-concept, we, for the first time, demonstrate a novel digestive ripening system to synthesize hydrophilic monodisperse Ag nanospheres capped by conveniently removable ligands. With chloride for oxidative etching and diethylamine for effective surface capping, monodisperse Ag nanospheres have been conveniently obtained by starting with a precursor of either a Ag+ solution or a AgCl suspension. These monodisperse Ag nanospheres with a clean surface exhibit excellent activity in surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). We believe that this new strategy may significantly broaden the general applicability of digestive ripening for the controlled synthesis of colloidal nanoparticles for a broad range of applications.
However, state-of-the-art digestive ripening syntheses are most successful in the synthesis of hydrophobic Au nanoparticles1,4–14 by relying on the strong interaction between Au nanoparticles and strongly coordinating ligands such as long-chain alkylthiols, amines and phosphines.7 Therefore, this process is usually carried out in a nonpolar solvent such as benzene, toluene, chloroform or dichlorobenzene.3 The roles of the strongly coordinating ligand in the digestive ripening process are two-fold: it serves as an etchant for the Au nanoparticles to enable their effective dissolution, and it is also a capping agent to reduce the surface energy of the Au nanoparticles.5,20 However, it leads to significant passivation of the nanoparticle surface and insolubility of the nanoparticles in many polar solvents, which greatly limits the use of these nanoparticles in many applications such as bio-sensing, labelling, imaging, and catalysis. In addition, the digestive ripening processes are usually conducted at the boiling temperature of the solvent, which is energy-consuming.3,9,10 For the synthesis of metal nanoparticles targeting primarily at biomedical and catalytic applications, an ideal digestive ripening process should be conducted preferably in a polar solvent under a mild condition, using a hydrophilic ligand that can be conveniently replaced.
To address this issue, in this work, we report that digestive ripening can be achieved by decoupling the etching and surface stabilization by using two independent hydrophilic chemical agents, which avoids the use of hydrophobic strongly coordinating ligands and enables us to synthesize monodisperse metal nanoparticles with a hydrophilic, exchangeable surface. As a proof-of-concept, for the first time, we demonstrate that hydrophilic monodisperse Ag nanospheres (diameter: 9–15 nm) could be synthesized in a polar solvent of N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF)21 by employing chloride (Cl−) for the oxidative etching of the Ag nanoparticles22,23 and diethylamine (DEA) for the surface stabilization,24,25 starting from either a Ag+ solution or a AgCl suspension. Thus, this novel system allows the use of considerably weak capping ligands that could be replaced later according to the need of specific applications. This study provides a robust method to synthesize monodisperse water-soluble Ag nanospheres in high yield and quality, which may find broad applications in surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS),26–28 bio-sensing,24 imaging,29 and photocatalysis.30,31 We believe the findings gained in this work may also help to advance the understanding of the digestive ripening process and significantly broaden its general applicability for the controlled synthesis of colloidal nanoparticles.
Fig. 1(a–c) shows the transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images of the intermediates formed at different stages of the synthesis. After the chemical reduction, Ag nanoparticles were obtained with a broad size distribution, showing the presence of both small (<20 nm) and large Ag nanoparticles (20–60 nm) (Fig. 1a). After the addition of NaCl, the population of the large Ag nanoparticles was significantly reduced, leading to a decrease in the mean size of the nanoparticles and a significant narrowing of the size distribution even after a very short reaction time (Fig. 1b, for the intermediate after 30 s of the reaction). A prolonged reaction time allowed further narrowing of the size distribution, and monodisperse Ag nanospheres were eventually obtained in 8 min (Fig. 1c, for a low-magnification TEM image see Fig. S3, ESI†). It is inferred that during the whole process, large nanoparticles were selectively etched, which led to a size focusing to a small value, typical of a digestive ripening phenomenon. Fig. 1f summarizes the size distributions of the Ag nanoparticles during the digestive ripening process. The size distribution started from a high standard deviation of 8.6 nm (42.5% of the mean size, 20.3 nm), which underwent a continuous decrease during the digestive ripening. The standard deviation was reduced to 1.5 nm (10% of the mean size, 15.0 nm) after 8 min, confirming the excellent monodispersity of the resulting Ag nanospheres. The high-resolution TEM (HRTEM) image and the corresponding Fourier diffractogram suggest that the resulting Ag nanospheres are polycrystalline nanocrystals (Fig. 1d).
The digestive ripening process of the Ag nanospheres can be monitored by UV-vis spectroscopy (Fig. 1e). Before the ripening, the polydisperse Ag nanoparticles exhibited an extinction band at ∼412 nm due to the strong localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR). After the addition of NaCl, significantly decreased intensity of the extinction band can be observed accompanying the oxidative etching process of the Ag nanoparticles. After ∼1 min, the intensity of the extinction band began to increase slowly, which suggests a regrowth of the Ag nanoparticles resulting from a further reduction of the Ag salt released by the etching process. It is worth noting that the regrowth continued for more than 60 min, indicating that a high concentration of Ag salt was present in the reaction as a result of the etching of the large Ag nanoparticles.
A further study was conducted to understand the mechanism of this unique digestive ripening process. In this system, the chloride is believed to account for the oxidative etching of the Ag nanoparticles under aerobic conditions.22,23 This can be confirmed by degassing O2 from a typical digestive ripening system, which leads to suppressed etching of the Ag nanoparticles (Fig. S4, ESI†). Our experiments also show that DEA plays a central role in enabling the etching selectivity of the Cl−/O2 toward the large Ag nanoparticles. If DEA is neutralized by acetic acid before a typical digestive ripening process, subsequent addition of the chloride leads to etching of Ag nanoparticles of small sizes and retention of large ones, producing Ag nanoparticles with an increased mean size (38.4 nm) and a broad size distribution (standard deviation, 9.9 nm, ∼25% of the mean size), in clear contrast to the typical process with DEA (Fig. 2a and b). As found in our previous reports,24,25,32 DEA can strongly adsorb on the Ag nanoparticles to reduce the surface energy (Fig. S5, ESI†). We believe that the reduction of the surface energy due to the DEA adsorption depends on the size of the Ag nanoparticles, which increases with a decreasing size of the nanoparticles. However, the decrease in the particle size also leads to significantly increased surface area and consequently surface energy. Therefore, an equilibrium size of the Ag nanoparticles could be achieved at a minimum surface energy, which accounts for the selective etching of Ag nanoparticles of large sizes and the formation of monodisperse Ag nanospheres.3
In addition, DMF as a solvent is also an important driving factor for the digestive ripening of the Ag nanoparticles. As indicated by a previous study,33 DMF is capable of coordinating to metal ions such as Ag(I), which makes it possible to accommodate a high concentration of AgCl during the oxidative etching so that the digestive ripening can proceed much more easily in DMF than in many other solvents. For comparison, no significant digestive ripening phenomenon could be observed when the synthesis is conducted in water (Fig. S6, ESI†).
Therefore, a reasonable mechanism can be proposed to rationalize this unique digestive ripening system (Fig. 2c). First, polydisperse Ag nanospheres were obtained and stabilized by DEA, with Ag nanoparticles of large sizes binding DEA more weakly than those of small ones. Upon the introduction of Cl−/O2, oxidative etching occurs selectively to Ag nanoparticles of large sizes. The resulting AgCl was well accommodated by DMF, which allows the continuous oxidative etching, leading to monodisperse Ag nanospheres of an equilibrium size depending on the binding energy of the Ag nanoparticles with DEA. In addition, the AgCl accommodated by DMF is capable of further reduction and regrowth on the existing Ag nanospheres, making it possible to synthesize monodisperse Ag nanospheres with controllable sizes.
As discussed above, the monodisperse Ag nanospheres were obtained with an equilibrium size, which suggests that the formation of the Ag nanospheres is independent of the reaction pathway. It is predicted that the same monodisperse Ag nanospheres could be obtained in a much more convenient way by convoluting the formation of Ag nanoparticles and the digestive ripening process in one step. In a typical modified synthesis, all chemicals including PVP, DEA, AgNO3 and NaCl were added to the solvent DMF, and the solution was first stirred at room temperature for 5 min and then at 50 °C for different lengths of time. As expected, monodisperse Ag nanospheres with an equilibrium size of ∼9 nm were obtained after a very short reaction time (Fig. 3a). A high concentration of AgCl in DMF enabled continuous growth of the monodisperse Ag nanospheres in the following step, giving rise to monodisperse Ag nanospheres with continuously increasing sizes (Fig. 3b–d). By this means, the mean size of the monodisperse Ag nanospheres could be conveniently tuned in a range of 9–15 nm, all showing narrow size distributions (standard deviation, <10%) (Fig. 3e). The intensity of the LSPR band increased continuously with time, suggesting an increasing concentration and/or size of the Ag nanospheres (Fig. 3f). No drops in the intensity of the LSPR band can be observed during the whole synthesis (as observed in Fig. 1e), which confirms that the chemical reduction and the digestive ripening occurred without a temporal sequence.
Interestingly, this unique digestive ripening mechanism allows direct conversion of a AgCl suspension into monodisperse Ag nanospheres (Fig. 4). It is not of surprise that one can produce Ag nanoparticles by reducing AgCl solids, albeit with broad size distributions. However, as Cl− ions are released after the chemical reduction, they together with DEA can initiate the effective digestive ripening process to afford monodisperse Ag nanospheres. In this case, the AgCl solid serves as both the Ag source and the Cl source. Because the digestive ripening is a thermodynamic process, the use of a AgCl solid in place of AgNO3 as the precursor does not exert a significant influence on the equilibrium size of the monodisperse Ag nanospheres. Fig. 4a–c shows the TEM images of the AgCl precipitate and the monodisperse Ag nanospheres obtained from this synthesis. Although the AgCl precipitate is micron-sized as a precursor (Fig. 4a), the resulting Ag nanospheres are highly uniform with a mean size of ∼15 nm (Fig. 4b and c). The complete transformation of the AgCl solid into monodisperse Ag nanospheres can be further confirmed by X-ray diffraction (XRD) (Fig. 4d). The direct conversion of AgCl solids into monodisperse Ag nanospheres not only provides direct evidence to support the digestive ripening mechanism, but also offers a robust method for the convenient preparation of Ag nanospheres in a high quality and yield in a very economical way.
This digestive ripening process is also applicable to the synthesis of monodisperse Ag–Au alloy nanospheres (Fig. S7, ESI†). At a high ratio of Ag/Au (larger than 5), the Ag–Au alloy nanoparticles become less stable and susceptible to chemical etching by Cl−/O2, which is prerequisite for a digestive ripening mechanism. As a result, the LSPR band of the monodisperse nanospheres can be conveniently tuned by the Ag/Au ratio in the alloy nanospheres.
As one advantage of this digestive ripening synthesis, we further show that it can readily be scaled up to produce a large quantity of monodisperse Ag nanospheres under mild reaction conditions. In a typical demonstration, 54 mg of monodisperse Ag nanospheres with a target size of ∼13 nm (corresponding to Fig. 3c) have been synthesized by scaling up a typical synthesis in the Materials and Methods section by 20 times (Fig. 5a and b). TEM imaging suggests that the Ag nanospheres obtained from the large-scale synthesis were of high monodispersity, with the mean size being almost identical to the target size, confirming excellent reproducibility of the method in a large scale synthesis without losing the overall quality.
More importantly, as no strongly coordinating ligands are involved in this digestive ripening process, it is capable of producing monodisperse Ag nanospheres with a hydrophilic surface and conveniently removable capping ligands (specifically, DEA and PVP). To confirm this significant advantage, the monodisperse Ag nanospheres (9 nm) were dried on a silicon substrate, washed with water, and subjected to surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) analysis. No obvious SERS signals could be detected from the surface ligands, suggesting that the ligands (DEA and PVP) have been effectively removed from the Ag surface by washing with water (Fig. 5c and Fig. S8, ESI†). The surfactant-free surface of the resulting Ag nanospheres enables excellent SERS activity in detecting molecules of interest, crystal violet for example, in ultralow concentrations (Fig. 5c). It is worth noting that the excellent SERS activity of the Ag nanospheres may be partially attributed to the presence of chloride on the Ag surface (Fig. S9, ESI†), which is commonly observed in the literature.34,35 We believe these monodisperse Ag nanospheres could find use in a much broader range of applications, such as biosensing, imaging, and fabrication of optical and electrical nanodevices.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: UV-vis and TEM results of the control experiments to support the mechanism of the digestive ripening synthesis, and additional Raman spectra. See DOI: 10.1039/c8qm00077h |
‡ These authors contributed equally to this work. |
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