21 research outputs found
Mechanistic Framework for the Formation of Different Sulfur Species by Electron Irradiation of n-Dodecanethiol Self-Assembled Monolayers on Au(111) and Au(100)
The electron-induced damage in self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of n-dodecanethiolate on Au(111) and Au(100) single-crystalline surfaces is investigated in situ by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The same irradiation dose produced different adsorbed groups. The damage at the headgroupâsubstrate interface leads to find dialkyl sulfide (RSâRâČ) on Au(111), while dialkyl disulfide (RSâSR) and/or thiol (RSH) were produced on Au(100). With regard to C species, significant amounts of CâC are generated on Au(111) but not on Au(100), showing that double bond formation is not triggered through the same pathways on these surfaces. Detailed analysis of a variety of mechanisms, which involved cationic (RS+), anionic (RSâ), or thiyl radical (RSâą) species, in combination with ab initio density functional theory (DFT) calculation, leads to the conclusion that the radical pathways successfully explain the experimental results. Molecular dynamics simulations show that the n-dodecanethiolate SAMs on both surfaces are equivalent with regard to the van der Waals interactions. The breakage of the SâAu bonds is studied by means of DFT calculations. The thiyl radical would form close to the Au(100) surface, making it likely to react with another thiyl radical or thiolate to form the RSâSR species. On the other hand, for Au(111), the thiyl radical would form farther from the surface, reacting with the alkyl chains of neighboring molecules to form RSâRâČ species. The mechanistic framework proposed here is very useful to explain the behavior of related systems.This work was supported in part by CONICET (PIP 0333), ANPCyT (PICT 2017-4519), Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP X786) of Argentina, and Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. J.O.-A. and M.M.M. acknowledge financial support from CONICET through Grant PIP 11220150100141CO, FONCyT PICT-2015-2191, and SeCyT UNC. This work has used computational resources from CCAD, Universidad Nacional de CoÌrdoba (http://ccad.unc.edu.ar/) and resources provided by the CYTED co-funded Thematic Network RICAP (517RT0529)
New insights into the chemistry of thiolate-protected palladium nanoparticles
This paper establishes the chemical nature of Pd nanoparticles protected by alkanethiolates that were prepared through a ligand placeexchange approach and the two-phase method, first developed for Au nanoparticles by Brust and Schiffrin. After 10 years since the first study on this kind of Pd nanoparticles was published, the surface composition of the particles is a matter of debate in the literature and it has not been unambiguously assessed. The nanoparticles were studied by means of several techniques: UVâvisible spectroscopy, scanning transmission electron microscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, extended X-ray absorption fine structure, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The experimental data, obtained for the 3 nm diameter Pd particles, prepared by both synthetic routes, are consistent with nanoparticles composed by Pd(0) cores surrounded by a submonolayer of sulfide species, which are protected by alkanethiolates. Also, we unambiguously demonstrate that the chemical nature of these particles is very similar to that experimentally found for alkanethiolate-modified bulk Pd. The results from this paper are important not only for handling thiolate-protected Pd nanoparticles in catalysis and sensing, but also for the basic comprehension of metallic nanoparticles and the relation of their surface structure with the synthesis method
Influence of Capping on the Atomistic Arrangement in Palladium Nanoparticles at Room Temperature
The
role that protecting molecules have on the way that palladium
atoms arrange themselves in nanoparticles prepared at room temperature
was studied by the analysis of aberration-corrected scanning transmission
electron microscopy images and atomistic Langevin dynamics simulations.
It was found that the arrangement of Pd atoms is less ordered in thiolate-protected
nanoparticles than in amine-protected ones. The experimental and theoretical
data showed that the disorder in âŒ3 nm thiolate-protected particles
is promoted by the strong SâPd bond in the sulfide layer that
surrounds the nanoparticles
New Insights into the Chemistry of Thiolate-Protected Palladium Nanoparticles
This paper establishes the chemical nature of Pd nanoparticles
protected by alkanethiolates that were prepared through a ligand place-exchange
approach and the two-phase method, first developed for Au nanoparticles
by Brust and Schiffrin. After 10 years since the first study on this
kind of Pd nanoparticles was published, the surface composition of
the particles is a matter of debate in the literature and it has not
been unambiguously assessed. The nanoparticles were studied by means
of several techniques: UVâvisible spectroscopy, scanning transmission
electron microscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, extended
X-ray absorption fine structure, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.
The experimental data, obtained for the 3 nm diameter Pd particles,
prepared by both synthetic routes, are consistent with nanoparticles
composed by Pd(0) cores surrounded by a submonolayer of sulfide species,
which are protected by alkanethiolates. Also, we unambiguously demonstrate
that the chemical nature of these particles is very similar to that
experimentally found for alkanethiolate-modified bulk Pd. The results
from this paper are important not only for handling thiolate-protected
Pd nanoparticles in catalysis and sensing, but also for the basic
comprehension of metallic nanoparticles and the relation of their
surface structure with the synthesis method