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Seed-Mediated Synthesis of Pd Nanocrystals: The Effect of Surface Capping on the Heterogeneous Nucleation and Growth
Seed-mediated
growth has emerged as an effective approach to the
synthesis of noble-metal nanocrystals with well-controlled sizes,
shapes, compositions, and structures. Although surface capping is
known to affect the growth pattern of a seed, its explicit role remains
to be fully understood. In this article, we applied the collision
model established for surface science to seed-mediated growth of nanocrystals
in an effort to account for the heterogeneous nucleation of atoms
on the surface of a seed and thus the growth pattern in the presence
or absence of a surface capping agent. Using Pd cubic seeds as a model
system, we demonstrated that the heterogeneous nucleation of Pd atoms
only occurred at the corner and edge sites when the {100} side faces
were selectively passivated by chemisorbed Br<sup>–</sup> ions.
In comparison, the Pd atoms were found to randomly nucleate on the
entire surface of similar Pd seeds if the Br<sup>–</sup> ions
were removed from the surface in advance. For a 1:1 mixture of Br<sup>–</sup>-capped and Br<sup>–</sup>-free Pd cubic seeds,
more atoms were added onto the Br<sup>–</sup>-free seeds due
to the involvement of a much larger bare surface with a higher sticking
coefficient. In addition, we found that the growth mode (island vs
layer-by-layer) of a seed was also highly sensitive to the surface
condition and could be altered by manipulating the rate of surface
diffusion. We further extended the collision model to account for
the growth behavior of other types of seeds whose surfaces were enclosed
by a mix of {111} and {100} facets in different proportions or characterized
by different internal structures, including Pd cuboctahedra and pentatwinned
nanowires. The mechanistic insights from this study clearly demonstrate
the role played by a surface capping agent in determining the sticking
coefficient of atoms and the morphology taken by nanocrystals in a
seed-mediated synthesis and should be extendable to other systems
involving different types or combinations of metals