News   

 ← Back

 

Research Article: Precise stirring conditions key to optimizing nanostructure synthesis

 
 


By Marta Siek

 

Stirring allows for homogenization and efficient gas exchange - this fact we have known for decades. But were we aware that a properly chosen stirring bar can give us higher gas-liquid mass transfer than in an industrial reactor? And did we realize that the delivery of oxygen to the synthetic mixture at a proper time and rate can be a make-or-break factor for the result of the synthesis? We answer these and other questions in the manuscript recently published and featured as Editor's Choice in the journal Small (IF 13.3): "Stirring-Controlled Synthesis of Ultrastable, Fluorescent Silver Nanoclusters" by Olgierd Cybulski, Cristobal Quintana, Marta Siek,* and Bartosz A. Grzybowski* (doi: 10.1002/smll.202400306).

 

Our case study is the synthesis of fluorescent silver nanoclusters in the classical sodium borohydride/glutathione system. We demonstrate how to precisely tune the properties of obtained structures - from unstable and non-fluorescent to highly fluorescent for over two years - just by controlling the stirring conditions. Even a very small change in the stirring bar size, from 25 by 12 mm to 20 by 10 mm, while keeping the same stirring rate, systematically resulted in a non-fluorescent product. Moreover, we show an unprecedented property of oxygen as a factor dictating the structure and functional properties of silver nanoclusters. 

 

"As a chemist, I was quite puzzled that oxygen did not simply "ruin"/oxidize silver - instead, the fluorescence became so lasting because oxygen incorporated into the silver lattice of the forming nanoclusters" - said Prof. Grzybowski, the head of the group. 

 

As a result, we report the unprecedented stability of our silver nanoclusters - over 2 years - that may open the door for wider use in catalysis, biosensing, or bioimaging. Our study leads to a better understanding of the structure-properties relationship of created nanostructures. It will allow for more flexible design of properties of synthesized nanomaterials and for broadening the scope of their potential uses.

 

Read the original article here

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 



 

Posted on Jul 12, 2024

 

  Next

New paper on micromachines and microbot swarms assembled and propelled by light 

  Before

New paper in Science demonstrates the power of AI, automation and global collaboration 

 

 

 

grzybowski-group.net
50, UNIST-gil, Ulsan 44919, Republic of Korea.
Copyright 2016 grzybowski-group.net All rights reserved