ACCESSING GROUP 6 TRANSITION METAL DICHALCOGENIDE NANOSTRUCTURES WITH COLLOIDAL SYNTHESIS

ACCESSING GROUP 6 TRANSITION METAL DICHALCOGENIDE NANOSTRUCTURES WITH COLLOIDAL SYNTHESIS PDF Author: Yifan Sun
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Languages : en
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Book Description
Layered transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are particularly intriguing targets due to unique anisotropic quantum confinement, phase engineering enabled by rich polymorphism, and favorable properties for optical, electronic, magnetic and catalytic applications. Colloidal synthesis has been developed as a powerful and scalable solution-phase tool to access free-standing TMD nanostructures. While several colloidal TMD nanostructures have been prepared, questions remain at establishing universal synthetic protocols to directly access well-defined nanostructures without post-annealing, delicate adjustment over chemical composition, structure and morphology associated with vertical thickness and lateral size, as well as understanding formation and transformation for the two-dimensional nanosheets. More challenges, from both synthesis and characterization perspectives, emerge for the colloidal synthesis of complex TMD species including atomically-mixed alloys and mixed-dimensional heterostructures. In this dissertation, I focus on the colloidal synthesis of group 6 TMD (MX2, M = Mo, W and X = S, Se, Te) nanostructures, alloys and heterostructures, as well as systematic study with a suite of spectroscopic and microscopic techniques. Moreover, I aim to extract novel fundamental insights through exploring the structure-property relationship, which can trigger a wider range of applications based on the dimension-confined TMD nanostructures.I start with the colloidal synthesis of few-layer 1T-MoTe2 nanostructures (Chapter 2). Uniform 1T-MoTe2 nanoflowers comprised of few-layer nanosheets form directly in colloidal solution, with approx. 1 % lateral lattice compression compared with the bulk analogue. It is interesting to directly obtain the metastable monoclinic (1T) polymorph at low temperatures where the 2H phase should be preferred. Besides a small energy difference between 1T- and 2H-MoTe2, and modification of the surface energy and formation barrier by organic ligands, grain boundary pinning facilitated by polycrystallinity and small domain size also contributes to the stabilization of the metastable 1T phase as revealed by computational studies. This study demonstrates the capability of colloidal approaches to obtain synthetically challenging TMD systems. I then target nanostructured TMD alloys to elucidate the relationship between continuous adjustment of elemental composition and tunable optical properties (Chapter 3). Few-layer TMD alloys, MoxW1-xSe2 and WS2ySe2(1-y), exhibiting tunable metal and chalcogen compositions spanning the MoSe2-WSe2 and WS2-WSe2 solid solutions, respectively, are directly synthesized in colloidal solution. Comprehensive structural characterization of the composition-tunable TMD samples are presented, together with instructive chemical synthetic guidelines. Importantly, we are able to identify a random distribution of the alloyed elements and various types of vacancy sites with high-resolution microscopic imaging. The A excitonic transition of the solution-dispersible TMD samples can be readily tuned between 1.51 and 1.93 eV via metal and chalcogen alloying, correlating composition modification with tunable optical properties. In Chapter 4, I further modify the colloidal synthetic approach to access tungsten ditelluride (WTe2), which exhibits exotic properties in magnetic and topological devices. Nanostructured WTe2 with the orthorhombic (Td) structure is directly synthesized in colloidal solution. Microscopic imaging monitors the anisotropic pathway by which the few-layer WTe2 nanoflowers grow, and captures the co-existence of multiple stacking patterns of the atomically-thin layers. In addition, nanostructured transition metal ditelluride alloys (MoxW1-xTe2) with 1T-MoTe2 and Td-WTe2 as end members are obtained. Using the variety of TMD nanostructures now accessible based on our studies and previous reports, we investigate the solution-phase deposition of noble metals (Au and Ag) on transition metal disulfides (1T- and 2H-WS2), diselenides (MoSe2 and WSe2) and ditellurides (1T-MoTe2 and WTe2) in Chapter 5. Au3+ and Ag+ are reduced on the surface of the TMD nanostructures at room temperature via a spontaneous charge transfer process, and the nucleation, growth, structure, and morphology of the deposited Au and Ag are highly dependent on the noble metal/chalcogen interface. In particular, efficient electron transfer and strong interactions between silver and tellurium through interfacial Ag-Te bonding lead to the deposition of single-atom-thick Ag layers on nanostructured 1T-MoTe2 and WTe2, producing unique monolayer coatings with distinct structural and energetic features. Construction of the interface-tunable hybrids indicates that colloidal TMD nanosheets provide a diverse platform to probe charge transfer as well as interfacial coupling at the atomic scale. In Chapter 6, I expand the knowledge gained from previous synthetic studies and exploit structure-property relationships of colloidal TMD nanostructures to identify new heterogeneous catalysts. Colloidally synthesized 2H-WS2 nanostructures are identified as active and robust catalysts to selectively hydrogenate nitroarenes to their corresponding anilines with molecular hydrogen. A broad scope of molecular substrates with reducible functional groups including alkynes, alkenes, nitriles, ketones, aldehydes, esters, carboxylic acids, amides, and halogens are tested to demonstrate the wide applicability of the 2H-WS2 nanostructures for chemoselective transformation of substituted nitroarenes. In addition, microscopic evidence indicates that the improved performance for the nanostructured 2H-WS2 compared with the inactive bulk counterparts is due to the existence of sulfur vacancies situated on the high surface area nanosheets.

ACCESSING GROUP 6 TRANSITION METAL DICHALCOGENIDE NANOSTRUCTURES WITH COLLOIDAL SYNTHESIS

ACCESSING GROUP 6 TRANSITION METAL DICHALCOGENIDE NANOSTRUCTURES WITH COLLOIDAL SYNTHESIS PDF Author: Yifan Sun
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :

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Book Description
Layered transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are particularly intriguing targets due to unique anisotropic quantum confinement, phase engineering enabled by rich polymorphism, and favorable properties for optical, electronic, magnetic and catalytic applications. Colloidal synthesis has been developed as a powerful and scalable solution-phase tool to access free-standing TMD nanostructures. While several colloidal TMD nanostructures have been prepared, questions remain at establishing universal synthetic protocols to directly access well-defined nanostructures without post-annealing, delicate adjustment over chemical composition, structure and morphology associated with vertical thickness and lateral size, as well as understanding formation and transformation for the two-dimensional nanosheets. More challenges, from both synthesis and characterization perspectives, emerge for the colloidal synthesis of complex TMD species including atomically-mixed alloys and mixed-dimensional heterostructures. In this dissertation, I focus on the colloidal synthesis of group 6 TMD (MX2, M = Mo, W and X = S, Se, Te) nanostructures, alloys and heterostructures, as well as systematic study with a suite of spectroscopic and microscopic techniques. Moreover, I aim to extract novel fundamental insights through exploring the structure-property relationship, which can trigger a wider range of applications based on the dimension-confined TMD nanostructures.I start with the colloidal synthesis of few-layer 1T-MoTe2 nanostructures (Chapter 2). Uniform 1T-MoTe2 nanoflowers comprised of few-layer nanosheets form directly in colloidal solution, with approx. 1 % lateral lattice compression compared with the bulk analogue. It is interesting to directly obtain the metastable monoclinic (1T) polymorph at low temperatures where the 2H phase should be preferred. Besides a small energy difference between 1T- and 2H-MoTe2, and modification of the surface energy and formation barrier by organic ligands, grain boundary pinning facilitated by polycrystallinity and small domain size also contributes to the stabilization of the metastable 1T phase as revealed by computational studies. This study demonstrates the capability of colloidal approaches to obtain synthetically challenging TMD systems. I then target nanostructured TMD alloys to elucidate the relationship between continuous adjustment of elemental composition and tunable optical properties (Chapter 3). Few-layer TMD alloys, MoxW1-xSe2 and WS2ySe2(1-y), exhibiting tunable metal and chalcogen compositions spanning the MoSe2-WSe2 and WS2-WSe2 solid solutions, respectively, are directly synthesized in colloidal solution. Comprehensive structural characterization of the composition-tunable TMD samples are presented, together with instructive chemical synthetic guidelines. Importantly, we are able to identify a random distribution of the alloyed elements and various types of vacancy sites with high-resolution microscopic imaging. The A excitonic transition of the solution-dispersible TMD samples can be readily tuned between 1.51 and 1.93 eV via metal and chalcogen alloying, correlating composition modification with tunable optical properties. In Chapter 4, I further modify the colloidal synthetic approach to access tungsten ditelluride (WTe2), which exhibits exotic properties in magnetic and topological devices. Nanostructured WTe2 with the orthorhombic (Td) structure is directly synthesized in colloidal solution. Microscopic imaging monitors the anisotropic pathway by which the few-layer WTe2 nanoflowers grow, and captures the co-existence of multiple stacking patterns of the atomically-thin layers. In addition, nanostructured transition metal ditelluride alloys (MoxW1-xTe2) with 1T-MoTe2 and Td-WTe2 as end members are obtained. Using the variety of TMD nanostructures now accessible based on our studies and previous reports, we investigate the solution-phase deposition of noble metals (Au and Ag) on transition metal disulfides (1T- and 2H-WS2), diselenides (MoSe2 and WSe2) and ditellurides (1T-MoTe2 and WTe2) in Chapter 5. Au3+ and Ag+ are reduced on the surface of the TMD nanostructures at room temperature via a spontaneous charge transfer process, and the nucleation, growth, structure, and morphology of the deposited Au and Ag are highly dependent on the noble metal/chalcogen interface. In particular, efficient electron transfer and strong interactions between silver and tellurium through interfacial Ag-Te bonding lead to the deposition of single-atom-thick Ag layers on nanostructured 1T-MoTe2 and WTe2, producing unique monolayer coatings with distinct structural and energetic features. Construction of the interface-tunable hybrids indicates that colloidal TMD nanosheets provide a diverse platform to probe charge transfer as well as interfacial coupling at the atomic scale. In Chapter 6, I expand the knowledge gained from previous synthetic studies and exploit structure-property relationships of colloidal TMD nanostructures to identify new heterogeneous catalysts. Colloidally synthesized 2H-WS2 nanostructures are identified as active and robust catalysts to selectively hydrogenate nitroarenes to their corresponding anilines with molecular hydrogen. A broad scope of molecular substrates with reducible functional groups including alkynes, alkenes, nitriles, ketones, aldehydes, esters, carboxylic acids, amides, and halogens are tested to demonstrate the wide applicability of the 2H-WS2 nanostructures for chemoselective transformation of substituted nitroarenes. In addition, microscopic evidence indicates that the improved performance for the nanostructured 2H-WS2 compared with the inactive bulk counterparts is due to the existence of sulfur vacancies situated on the high surface area nanosheets.

Control Over Precursor Conversion for the Synthesis of Tailored Group-VI Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Nanocrystals

Control Over Precursor Conversion for the Synthesis of Tailored Group-VI Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Nanocrystals PDF Author: Jessica Quinn Geisenhoff
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 0

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Book Description
Transition metal dichalcogenides are a class of materials that are built from two-dimensional layers held together via Van der Waals interactions. These materials are structurally diverse and can adopt multiple phases. In particular, the group VI TMDs (MoS2, MoSe2, WS2, WSe2) exist in either a metastable 2M phase or the thermodynamically favored 2H phase. Material properties can be tuned by controlling the phase or the number of layers in the crystal, making controllable syntheses of these materials highly desired. Colloidal synthesis offers a solution-phase route to solid-state materials. Conducting the synthesis in the solution phase allows a synthetic chemist to access a diverse parameter space that is usually not afforded with more traditional solid-state syntheses. This includes being able to tune reaction temperature, ligand environment, and precursor reactivity, which can easily lead to kinetically controlled reaction regimes and direct synthesis of metastable phases. This dissertation demonstrates that colloidal synthesis is a viable tool for phase tunable syntheses of TMDs, as well as investigating aspects that govern phase conversion.The coordination and reactivity of the tungsten precursor used can be influenced via the ligands used. Reactions performed in solutions of either the strongly coordinating oleic acid, or the weakly coordinating trioctylphosphine oxide are detailed in chapter 2. The size and phase of the nanocrystals are tuned, where increased amounts of oleic acid decrease the reactivity leading to large nanocrystals of the metastable 2M phase. Building upon the work outlined in chapter 2, chapter 3 leverages the reduced reactivity of the metal precursor in great amounts of oleic acid to synthesize metal selenide/tungsten diselenide heterostructures via a one-pot method. The delayed reactivity in oleic acid allows for the nucleation of other metal selenides prior to the secondary growth of WSe2. How the coordination environment of tungsten influences reactivity and nanocrystal formation is more rigorously evaluated in chapter 4. Heating W(CO)6 in the presence of either trioctylphosphine oxide or trioctylphosphine forms W(CO)6-x(L)x intermediates. Phosphine oxides promote CO labilization while phosphines hinder this process. Thus, performing reactions in TOPO lead to low-temperature syntheses of the metastable 2M phase, while those with TOP require additional heating. Insights into how morphology impacts phase conversion from the metastable 2M phase to the thermodynamically favored 2H phase are investigated in chapter 5. Reactions performed in trioctylphosphine oxide with differing concentration results in WSe2 nanocrystals with differing layer numbers. Here, high precursor concentrations lead to nanocrystals with increased number of layers without changing the lateral size of the nanocrystals. This change in nanocrystal morphology is accompanied by a reduction in the phase conversion rate from the 2M phase to the 2H phase. Phase conversion is likely slowed with increased interlayer binding energies. Finally, a synthetic route to monolayer TMD nanocrystals is outlined in chapter 6. Controlled heat-ups in the presence of excess trioctylphosphine result in ligands tightly bound to the basal plane of the TMDs. These ligands permanently separate the layers from one another, producing monolayers, and influence the electronic properties of the nanocrystals. Additionally, phase conversion is rapid in these monolayer-like systems.

Tailor Synthesis of 0D, 1D and 2D Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Nanostructures

Tailor Synthesis of 0D, 1D and 2D Transition Metal Dichalcogenide Nanostructures PDF Author: Faegheh Hoshyargar
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 146

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Colloidal Synthesis of the 2H and 2M Phases of Tungsten Disulfide Nanocrystals

Colloidal Synthesis of the 2H and 2M Phases of Tungsten Disulfide Nanocrystals PDF Author: Ashley Katelyn Tamura
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 48

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Layered materials have recently gained a lot of attention, in particular group-VI transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). This class of materials exhibits unique phase-specific properties ranging in behavior from metallic to semiconducting to topologically insulating. Selecting for a single phase to utilize for their desired applications can be challenging, however, due to their similar ground state energies. Here we examine WS2 nanocrystals (NCs), which nucleate as the metastable 2M phase and gradually convert to the thermodynamically-favored 2H phase. We develop a phase-tunable colloidal synthesis by controlling the reactivity to either hinder or promote rapid phase conversion in order to access the 2M and 2H phases, respectively. We found that inclusion of oleic acid (OA) decreases the reactivity of the tungsten hexacarbonyl precursor, resulting in reduced phase-conversion upon reaction with sulfur. Reactivity of the W and S precursors can, however, be promoted by utilizing the one-pot method of sulfur addition, in which sulfur is present during the heating process. This increase in the direct W-S reactivity leads to rapid phase-conversion. Finally, we compare the reactivity of various S-precursors, including thiols and diorgano disulfides. The use of thiols results in more rapid phase-conversion, which we hypothesize is due to increased interlayer distances enabled by the incorporation of the alkyl group as a "crystal-bound" ligand. Collectively, these synthetic tools offer controllable access to either the 2M or 2H phase of WS2 NCs.

Synthesis and Properties of Closed Cage Nanostructures (IF) from Group 5 Transition-metal Chalcogenides

Synthesis and Properties of Closed Cage Nanostructures (IF) from Group 5 Transition-metal Chalcogenides PDF Author: Christoph Schuffenhauer
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 75

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Synthesis of Complex Nanostructures of Layered Metal Chalcogenides and Other Nanomaterials Using Colloidal Chemistry

Synthesis of Complex Nanostructures of Layered Metal Chalcogenides and Other Nanomaterials Using Colloidal Chemistry PDF Author: Du Sun
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :

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To access novel and complex nanostructures spanning the wide variety of chemical composition and crystal conformation has significant impact on the next technology revolution in the sense that the ability to produce advanced materials underpins the development of the future devices. Solution-based chemical synthesis of nanomaterials in the colloidal solution has attracted numerous attentions in the last few decades because the huge potential scientists have seen in this method to achieve unprecedented control over the materials characteristics such as morphology, composition, size, and uniformity demonstrated by the successful synthesis of quantum dots to the construction of complex hierarchical structures. Layered metal chalcogenides is a family of compounds that when reducing the layer thickness into nanoscale becomes a good analog to graphene, but with much more plentiful choices of chemical composition and properties. The application of colloidal synthesis into making 2D materials based on the layered metal chalcogenides is an exciting research direction but still in its infancy. In this dissertation we describe how to control the reaction parameters in colloidal synthesis to make meta-stable and complex nanostructures with interesting properties that could have potential application in the field of energy storage and conversion. First, we discuss the colloidal synthesis of amorphous germanium iron alloy nanoparticles and their electrochemical performance as anode materials for lithium ion batteries. The meta-stable amorphous state of the particles was achieved by a fast quenching step following the crystal nucleation and growth. Both thermodynamic and kinetic factors are evaluated through aliquot study to elucidate the growth pathways. The as-prepared sample was tested for the half-cell and acquired good specific capacity and cycling stability. The addition of iron into the germanium is believed to effectively alleviate the volume change during the lithiation/delithiation process of germanium and possibly has a good impact on the overall electrical conductivity of the material. Introducing earth-abundant elements into the silicon-related materials is a promising way to reduce the cost of the next generation lithium ion batteries while still maintain a good performance. Next, the principles we learned in the colloidal synthesis of metal alloys are adopted and modified to successfully make MoSe2 nanoflowers that comprise of poly-crystalline few-layered nanosheets. Besides the reaction kinetics, precursor choices that affect the reactivity of the chalcogen entities in the solution have been identified as the key parameters to determine both the morphology and crystallinity of the final product. Characterization techniques like powder XRD and high-resolution TEM have been employed to reveal a slight deviation of the crystal structure of the nanoflowers from the bulk counterpart, which we believe can be attributed to the few-layer nature of these flowers. Raman spectroscopy is used to probe the interlayer decoupling behavior of the flowers with different size and layer thickness compared with the bulk MoSe2. We found out that the interlayer interaction can be modulated through laser heating, thermal, as well as nanostructuring effect and especially the laser modulation could result fast and reversible response. This study presents the possibility and feasibility of using colloidally synthesized TMDs as the platform to understand the 2D properties of these materials.Chapter 4 takes the knowledge we learn in the previous two studies into the exploration of novel and under-studied ternary metal chalcogenides using colloidal synthesis. By a facile one-pot heat-up method, we have successfully obtained a ternary In4SnSe4 with a unique crystal structure that is drastically different from the well-known binary metal chalcogenides crystal structures of zincblende or wurtzite that are both derivative of diamond structure. The as-prepared microwires of In4SnSe is proven by high-resolution TEM and STEM-EDS mapping to have a surface Si-contained oxide layer of about 10~20 nm. Bandgap calculation of the In4SnSe predicts an electronic band structure with a direct band gap of 2.0 eV, which matches well with the solar spectrum and make it a promising candidate material in the photovoltaic devices. The optical bandgap of the as-prepared sample was also measured by diffuse reflectance UV-Vis spectroscopy and yielding a value of 1.57 eV, which matches well with the photoluminescence peak located around 1.54 eV. Both theoretical and experimental result corroborate on the possession of a direct bandgap of ~1.5 eV for the In4SnSe4, which could attract more studies on this family of materials that have similar crystal structure. Finally, the GeSe and SnSe from the layered metal chalcogenides family are used as a model system to study the possibility of making 2D heterostructures in colloidal solution. We have employed both heat-up and continuous hot-injection method to test various reaction parameters such as precursor concentration and adding sequence and are able to obtain five different samples of 2D heterostructures, one of which realized a full coverage of SnSe on top of the entire GeSe hexagonal sheet. These 2D heterostructures are in the scale of few micron meters, which has never been achieved in any other 2D heterostructures before. By comparing the morphologies of the five samples, we propose a growth pathway that affected by both thermodynamics and kinetics, involving the competition between homogeneous nucleation/growth and the heterogeneous nucleation/growth. The methodology in this study can be potentially applied to other 2D systems with more imminent technical significance.

Nanosheets by Design

Nanosheets by Design PDF Author: Dimitri D. Vaughn
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 272

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Two Dimensional Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

Two Dimensional Transition Metal Dichalcogenides PDF Author: Narayanasamy Sabari Arul
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 9811390452
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 355

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Book Description
This book presents advanced synthesis techniques adopted to fabricate two-dimensional (2D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) materials with its enhanced properties towards their utilization in various applications such as, energy storage devices, photovoltaics, electrocatalysis, electronic devices, photocatalysts, sensing and biomedical applications. It provides detailed coverage on everything from the synthesis and properties to the applications and future prospects of research in 2D TMD nanomaterials.

SIZE-CONTROLLED SYNTHESIS OF TRANSITION METAL NANOPARTICLES THROUGH CHEMICAL AND PHOTO-CHEMICAL ROUTES

SIZE-CONTROLLED SYNTHESIS OF TRANSITION METAL NANOPARTICLES THROUGH CHEMICAL AND PHOTO-CHEMICAL ROUTES PDF Author: Behzad Tangeysh
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 304

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The central objective of this work is developing convenient general procedures for controlling the formation and stabilization of nanoscale transition metal particles. Contemporary interest in developing alternative synthetic approaches for producing nanoparticles arises in large part from expanding applications of the nanomaterials in areas such as catalysis, electronics and medicine. This research focuses on advancing the existing nanoparticle synthetic routes by using a new class of polymer colloid materials as a chemical approach, and the laser irradiation of metal salt solution as a photo-chemical method to attain size and shape selectivity. Controlled synthesis of small metal nanoparticles with sizes ranging from 1 to 5nm is still a continuing challenge in nanomaterial synthesis. This research utilizes a new class of polymer colloid materials as nano-reactors and protective agents for controlling the formation of small transition metal nanoparticles. The polymer colloid particles were formed from cross-linking of dinegatively charged metal precursors with partially protonated poly dimethylaminoethylmethacrylate (PDMAEMA). Incorporation of [PtCl6]2- species into the colloidal particles prior to the chemical reduction was effectively employed as a new strategy for synthesis of unusually small platinum nanoparticles with narrow size distributions (1.12 ± 0.25nm). To explore the generality of this approach, in a series of proof-of-concept studies, this method was successfully employed for the synthesis of small palladium (1.4 ±0.2nm) and copper nanoparticles (1.5 ±0.6nm). The polymer colloid materials developed in this research are pH responsive, and are designed to self-assemble and/or disassemble by varying the levels of protonation of the polymer chains. This unique feature was used to tune the size of palladium nanoparticles in a small range from 1nm to 5nm. The procedure presented in this work is a new convenient room temperature route for synthesis of small nanoparticles, and its application can be extended to the formation of other transition metals and alloy nanoparticles. This research also focuses on developing new photo-chemical routes for controlling the size and shape of the nanoparticles through high-intensity ultra-fast laser irradiation of metal salt solution. One of the core objectives of this work is to explore the special capabilities of shaped laser pulses in formation of metal nanoparticles through irradiation of the solutions by using simultaneous spatial and temporal focusing (SSTF). Femtosecond laser irradiation has not yet been widely applied for nanoparticle synthesis, and offers new regimes of energy deposition for synthesis of nanomaterials. Photo-reduction of aqueous [AuCl4]- solution to the gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) has been applied as a model process for optimizing the experimental procedures, and evaluating the potential of shaped laser pulses in the synthesis of AuNPs. Systematic manipulation of the laser parameters and experimental conditions provided effective strategies to control the size of Au nanoparticles in strong laser fields. Varying the concentration of polyethylene glycol (PEG45) as a surfactant effectively tuned the size of AuNPs from 3.9 ±0.7nm to 11.0 ±2.4nm, and significantly increased the rate of Au(III) reduction during irradiation. Comparative studies revealed the capability of shaped laser pulses in the generation of smaller and more uniform AuNPs (5.8 ±1.1nm) relative to the other conventional laser irradiation methods (7.2 ±2.9nm). Furthermore, a new laser-assisted approach has been developed for selective formation of triangular Au nanoplates in the absence of any surfactant molecule. This method relies on rapid energy deposition by using shaped, ultra-intense laser pulses to generate Au seeds in aqueous [AuCl4]- solution, and the slow post-irradiation reduction of un-reacted [AuCl4]- species by using H2O2 as a mild reducing agent. Variation of the laser irradiation-time was found as an effective strategy to tune the morphology of Au nanomaterials from nanospheres to triangular nanoplates. The surfactant-free Au nanoplates produced in this research can be readily functionalized with a variety of target molecules or surfactants for desirable applications such as biomedicine. The concept of rapid laser processing followed by in situ chemical reduction can be expanded as a general methodology for high-yield production of nanomaterials, and provides a series of new laser dependent parameters for controlling the nanoparticle formation.

Sustainable Materials and Green Processing for Energy Conversion

Sustainable Materials and Green Processing for Energy Conversion PDF Author: Kuan Yew Cheong
Publisher: Elsevier
ISBN: 0128230703
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 506

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Sustainable Materials and Green Processing for Energy Conversion provides a concise reference on green processing and synthesis of materials required for the next generation of devices used in renewable energy conversion and storage. The book covers the processing of bio-organic materials, environmentally-friendly organic and inorganic sources of materials, synthetic green chemistry, bioresorbable and transient properties of functional materials, and the concept of sustainable material design. The book features chapters by worldwide experts and is an important reference for students, researchers, and engineers interested in gaining extensive knowledge concerning green processing of sustainable, green functional materials for next generation energy devices. Additionally, functional materials used in energy devices must also be able to degrade and decompose with minimum energy after being disposed of at their end-of-life. Environmental pollution is one of the global crises that endangers the life cycles of living things. There are multiple root causes of this pollution, including industrialization that demands a huge supply of raw materials for the production of products related to meeting the demands of the Internet-of-Things. As a result, improvement of material and product life cycles by incorporation of green, sustainable principles is essential to address this challenging issue. Offers a resourceful reference for readers interested in green processing of environmentally-friendly and sustainable materials for energy conversion and storage devices Focuses on designing of materials through green-processing concepts Highlights challenges and opportunities in green processing of renewable materials for energy devices