z-logo
Premium
Seed‐Assisted Synthesis of BaCrO 4 Nanoparticles and Nanostructures in Water‐in‐Oil Microemulsions
Author(s) -
Johnson C. J.,
Li M.,
Mann S.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.200400197
Subject(s) - microemulsion , nanoparticle , materials science , nanostructure , chemical engineering , pulmonary surfactant , particle (ecology) , particle size , nanotechnology , morphology (biology) , nanocrystal , oceanography , geology , biology , engineering , genetics
Isooctane dispersions of discrete isometric BaCrO 4 nanoparticles or self‐assembled linear chains of prismatic BaCrO 4 nanoparticles were added as surfactant‐coated seed crystals/nanostructures to Na 2 CrO 4 /NaAOT/Ba(AOT) 2 /isooctane microemulsion reaction solutions prepared at w  = 10 with molar ratios favoring the de novo synthesis of either nanoparticle chains ([Ba 2+ ]/ [CrO 4 2– ] = 1:1) or isolated nanoparticles ([Ba 2+ ]/[CrO 4 2– ] = 1:5.5). Addition of BaCrO 4 nanoparticles or chains under particle‐ or chain‐producing conditions, respectively, resulted in preferential growth of the seeds with retention of particle morphology and nanostructure architecture. In contrast, addition of linear chains to microemulsion reaction solutions under particle‐producing conditions resulted in disruption of the seed nanostructure and overgrowth of the released prismatic nanoparticles to produce discrete oval‐shaped or cuboidal nanocrystals depending on the seed concentration used. Discrete faceted nanoparticles were also produced by seed‐assisted synthesis when isometric nanoparticles were added at relatively high concentrations to chain‐producing microemulsion reaction solutions; however, decreasing the seed population resulted in intact self‐assembled linear chains and superlattices that consisted of interlinked prismatic nanoparticles with end‐capped pseudo‐hexagonal morphology. Growth of the seeds and their assembly/disassembly was consistent with a model of coupled synthesis and self‐organization based on the strength of electrostatic interactions at the surfactant‐crystal interface. The results suggest that microemulsion‐based processes could be of general importance for controlling the secondary growth of pre‐organized nanoparticle‐based superstructures, as well as the morphological refinement of their constituent building blocks.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here