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In-situ characterization of colloidal soft solution processes.
Author(s) -
D. R. Tallant,
Mark A. Rodriguez,
Nelson S. Bell
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/918371
Subject(s) - nucleation , dispersion (optics) , colloid , nanoparticle , chemical physics , materials science , particle (ecology) , characterization (materials science) , zeta potential , dispersion stability , raman scattering , nanotechnology , raman spectroscopy , chemical engineering , chemistry , optics , physics , organic chemistry , oceanography , engineering , geology
The purpose of this program was to investigate methods to characterize the colloidal stability of nanoparticles during the synthesis reaction, and to characterize their organization related to interparticle forces. Studies were attempted using Raman spectroscopy and ultrasonic attenuation to observe the nucleation and growth process with characterization of stability parameters such as the zeta potential. The application of the techniques available showed that the instrumentation requires high sensitivity to the concentration of the system. Optical routes can be complicated by the scattering effects of colloidal suspensions, but dilution can cause a lowering of signal that prevents collection of data. Acoustic methods require a significant particle concentration, preventing the observation of nucleation events. Studies on the dispersion of nanoparticles show that electrostatic routes are unsuccessful with molecular surfactants at high particle concentration due to electrostatic interaction collapse by counterions. The study of molecular surfactants show that steric lengths on the order of 2 nm are successful for dispersion of nanoparticle systems at high particle concentration, similar to dispersion with commercial polyelectrolyte surfactants

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