Monovalent Alkali Cations: Simple and Eco-Friendly Stabilizers for Surfactant-Free Precious Metal Nanoparticle Colloids
Author(s) -
Jonathan Quinson,
Jan Bucher,
Søren Bredmose Simonsen,
Luise Theil Kuhn,
Sebastian Kunz,
Matthias Arenz
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs sustainable chemistry and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.878
H-Index - 109
ISSN - 2168-0485
DOI - 10.1021/acssuschemeng.9b00681
Subject(s) - pulmonary surfactant , alkali metal , nanoparticle , colloid , platinum nanoparticles , salt (chemistry) , aqueous solution , inorganic chemistry , catalysis , chemistry , methanol , chemical engineering , base (topology) , base metal , environmentally friendly , platinum , materials science , nanotechnology , organic chemistry , mathematical analysis , ecology , biochemistry , mathematics , welding , engineering , metallurgy , biology
The Co4Cat approach is a surfactant-free industry-relevant method to synthesize precious metal nanoparticles with enhanced catalytic properties. Colloidal nanoparticles are obtained by reduction of a metal salt in a monoalcohol such as methanol in the presence of a base. As opposed to alternative surfactant-free syntheses, in the Co4Cat approach, the nature of the alkali cations used strongly influences the most suitable strategy to achieve different nanoparticle size, to process and to stabilize surfactant-free platinum nanoparticles. The rational selection of the base needed in the Co4Cat process is detailed here. Monovalent alkali cations stabilize the as-synthesized and redispersed nanoparticles in monoalcohols and aqueous solvents with the decreasing order of efficiency: Li+> Na+ > K+ ≈ Cs+ which correlates with the decreasing hydration energy of the cation. Li+ and Na+ cations are shown to serve as simple, eco-friendly, and efficient stabilizers for surfactant-free platinum nanoparticle colloids.
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