The Big Impact of a Small
Detail: Cobalt Nanocrystal
Polymorphism as a Result of Precursor Addition Rate during Stock Solution
Preparation
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Abstract
The control of nanocrystal structures at will is still
a challenge,
despite the recent progress of colloidal synthetic procedures. It
is common knowledge that even small modifications of the reaction
parameters during synthesis can alter the characteristics of the resulting
nano-objects. In this work we report an unexpected factor which determines
the structure of cobalt nanoparticles. Nanocrystals of distinctly
different sizes and shapes have resulted from stock solutions containing
exactly the same concentrations of [Co{N(SiMe<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>}<sub>2</sub>(thf)], hexadecylamine, and lauric acid. The reduction
reaction itself has been performed under identical conditions. In
an effort to explain these differences and to analyze the reaction
components and any molecular intermediates, we have discovered that
the rate at which the cobalt precursor is added to the ligand solution
during the stock solution preparation at room temperature becomes
determinant by triggering off a nonanticipated side reaction which
consumes part of the lauric acid, the main stabilizing ligand, transforming
it to a silyl ester. Thus, an innocent mixing, apparently not related
to the main reaction which produces the nanoparticles, becomes the
parameter which in fine defines nanocrystal characteristics. This
side reaction affects in a similar way the morphology of iron nanoparticles
prepared from an analogous iron precursor and the same long chain
stabilizing ligands. Side reactions are potentially operational in
a great number of systems yielding nanocrystals, despite the fact
that they are very rarely mentioned in the literature