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Shaping Magnetite with Poly-l-arginine and pH: From Small Single Crystals to Large Mesocrystals
Author(s) -
Lucas Kuhrts,
Elena MacíasSánchez,
Nadezda V. Tarakina,
Ann M. Hirt,
Damien Faivre
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b01771
Subject(s) - magnetite , magnetotactic bacteria , superparamagnetism , magnetosome , chemical engineering , particle size , nanomaterials , nanoparticle , transmission electron microscopy , chemistry , materials science , nanotechnology , crystallography , magnetization , physics , magnetic field , metallurgy , quantum mechanics , engineering
Control over particle size, size distribution, and colloidal stability are central aims in producing functional nanomaterials. Recently, biomimetic approaches have been successfully used to enhance control over properties in the synthesis of those materials. Magnetotactic bacteria produce protein-stabilized magnetite away from its thermodynamic equilibrium structure. Mimicking the bacteria's proteins using poly-l-arginine we show that by simply increasing the pH, the dimensions of magnetite increase and a single- to mesocrystal transformation is induced. Using synchrotron X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy, we show that magnetite nanoparticles with narrow size distributions and average diameters of 10 ± 2 nm for pH 9, 20 ± 2 nm for pH 10, and up to 40 ± 4 nm for pH 11 can be synthesized. We thus selectively produce superparamagnetic and stable single-domain particles merely by controlling the pH. Remarkably, while an increase in pH brings about a thermodynamically driven decrease in size for magnetite without additives, this dependency on pH is inverted when poly-l-arginine is present.

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