We report on the time evolution of the sodium tetrachloroaurate (NaAuCl(4)) chemical properties as a function of soft X-ray exposure in a dried sample on a silicon surface using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Our investigations provide mechanistic insight into the photoreduction kinetics from Au(III) to Au(I) and then Au(I) to Au(0). We unambiguously show that XPS photoreduction occurs in stepwise fashion via the Au(I) state. Both photoreduction steps undergo first-order kinetics.
We report on the time evolution of gold nanoparticle (AuNP) optical properties and size distributions as a function of laser irradiation in pure water samples and at sodium dodecylsulphate (SDS) surfactant concentrations above and below the SDS critical micelle concentration in water. Our investigations provide a mechanistic insight into the laser-induced formation kinetics involved in AuNP production via 1064 nm laser irradiation in aqueous solution, as well as the relative stabilities of different AuNP size regimes. Following preparation via laser ablation at 1064 nm, we show that 532 nm laser irradiation in the absence of surfactant generates AuNP that are both small in size and possess a narrow particle size distribution. This distribution remains narrow and shifts to smaller average particle size with increasing surfactant concentration.
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