A Water Solvation Shell Can Transform Gold Metastable Nanoparticles in the Fluxional Regime
Author(s) -
ChenHui Chan,
Floriane Poignant,
Michaël Beuve,
Élise Dumont,
David Loffreda
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.8b03822
Subject(s) - solvation shell , solvation , nanoparticle , adsorption , nanoclusters , metastability , chemical physics , hydrogen bond , shell (structure) , molecule , colloidal gold , density functional theory , materials science , nanotechnology , chemistry , computational chemistry , composite material , organic chemistry
Solvated gold nanoparticles have been modeled in the fluxional regime by density functional theory including dispersion forces for an extensive set of conventional morphologies. The study of isolated adsorption of one water molecule shows that the most stable adsorption forms are similar (corners and edges) regardless of the nanoparticle shape and size, although the adsorption strength differs significantly (0.15 eV). When a complete and explicit water solvation shell interacts with gold nanoclusters, metastable in vacuum and presenting a predominance of (100) square facets (ino-decahedra Au 55 and Au 147 ), these nanoparticles are found unstable and transform into the closest morphologies exhibiting mainly (111) triangular facets and symmetries. The corresponding adsorption strength per water molecule becomes independent of shape and size and is enhanced by the formation of two hydrogen bonds on average. For applications in radiotherapy, this study suggests that the shapes of small gold nanoparticles should be homogenized by interacting with the biological environment.
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