In this report, we evaluate the present state of the rapidly emerging field of monolayer-protected cluster (MPC) molecules with regard to their synthesis and monolayer functionalization, their core and monolayer structure, their composition, and their properties. Finally, we canvass some of the important remaining research opportunities involving MPCs.
The mean size of the gold (Au) core in the synthesis of dodecanethiolate-stabilized Au cluster compounds can be finely adjusted by choice of the Au:dodecanethiolate ratio and the temperature and rate at which the reduction is conducted. The Au clusters have been examined with a large number of independent analytical tools, producing a remarkably consistent picture of these materials. Average cluster and core dimensions, as ascertained by 1H NMR line broadening, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, and thermogravimetric analysis, vary between diameters of 1.5 and 5.2 nm (∼110−4800 Au atoms/core). The electronic properties of the Au core were examined by UV/vis and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy; the core appears to remain largely metallic in nature even at the smallest core sizes examined. The alkanethiolate monolayer stabilizing the Au core ranges with core size from ∼53 to nearly 520 ligands/core, and was probed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, contact-angle measurements, and thermal desorption mass spectrometry. The dodecanethiolate monolayer on small and large core clusters exhibits discernable differences; the line dividing “3-dimensional” monolayers and those resembling self-assembled monolayers on flat Au (2-dimensional monolayers) occurs at clusters with ∼4.4 nm core diameters.
We report the crystal structure of the thiolate gold nanoparticle [TOA+][Au25(SCH2CH2Ph)18-], where TOA+ = N(C8H17)4+. The crystal structure reveals three types of gold atoms: (a) one central gold atom whose coordination number is 12 (12 bonds to gold atoms); (b) 12 gold atoms that form the vertices of an icosahedron around the central atom, whose coordination number is 6 (five bonds to gold atoms and one to a sulfur atom), and (c) 12 gold atoms that are stellated on 12 of the 20 faces of the Au13 icosahedron. The arrangement of the latter gold atoms may be influenced by aurophilic bonding. Together they form six orthogonal semirings, or staples, of -Au2(SCH2CH2Ph)3- in an octahedral arrangement around the Au13 core.
Monolayer-protected gold clusters (Au MPCs) are stable, easily synthesized, organic solvent-soluble, nanoscale materials. MPCs with protecting monolayers composed of alkanethiolate ligands (RS) can be functionalized (R‘S) by ligand place-exchange reactions, i.e., x(R‘SH) + (RS) m MPC → x(RSH) + (R‘S) m (RS) m - x MPC, where x is the number of ligands place-exchanged (1 to 108) and m is the original number (ca. 108) of alkanethiolate ligands per Au314 cluster. The dynamics and mechanism of this reaction were probed by determining its kinetic order and final equilibrium position relative to incoming (R‘S) and initial (RS) protecting thiolate ligands. The reactions were characterized by 1H NMR and IR spectroscopy, and the dispersity of place-exchange reaction products was preliminarily inspected by chromatography. The results of these experiments show that ligand exchange is an associative reaction and that the displaced thiolate becomes a thiol solution product. Disulfides and oxidized sulfur species are not involved in the reaction. Cluster-bound thiolate ligands differ widely in susceptibility to place-exchange, presumably owing to differences in binding sites (Au core edge and vertice sites are presumably more reactive than terrace sites). The rate of place-exchange decreases as the chain length and/or steric bulk of the initial protecting ligand shell is increased. The exchange results and proposed mechanism are compared to those for place-exchange reactions on self-assembled monolayers confined to flat gold surfaces.
A transition from metal-like double-layer capacitive charging to redox-like charging was observed in electrochemical ensemble Coulomb staircase experiments on solutions of gold nanoparticles of varied core size. The monodisperse gold nanoparticles are stabilized by short-chain alkanethiolate monolayers and have 8 to 38 kilodaltons core mass (1.1 to 1.9 nanometers in diameter). Larger cores display Coulomb staircase responses consistent with double-layer charging of metal-electrolyte interfaces, whereas smaller core nanoparticles exhibit redox chemical character, including a large central gap. The change in behavior is consistent with new near-infrared spectroscopic data showing an emerging gap between the highest occupied and lowest unoccupied orbitals of 0.4 to 0.9 electron volt.
This perspective reviews recent developments in the synthesis, electrochemistry, and optical properties of gold nanoparticles, with emphasis on papers initiating the developments and with an eye to their consequences. Key aspects of Au nanoparticle synthesis have included the two-phase synthesis of thiolated nanoparticles, the sequestration and reduction of Au salts within dendrimers, the controlled growth of larger particles of well-defined shapes via the seeded approach, and the assembling of a variety of nanoparticle networks and nanostructures. The electrochemistry of thiolated Au nanoparticles is systemized as regions of bulk-continuum voltammetry, voltammetry reflective of quantized double-layer charging, and molecule-like voltammetry reflective of molecular energy gaps. These features are principally determined by the nanoparticle core. Interesting multielectron Au nanoparticle voltammetry is observed when the thiolate ligand shell has been decorated with redox groupings. Another development is that Au nanoparticles were discovered to exhibit unanticipated properties as heterogeneous catalysts, starting with the low-temperature oxidation of CO. Substantial progress has also been made in understanding the surface plasmon spectroscopy of Au nanoparticles and nanorods. The need to investigate the optical properties of metal particles of a single, well-defined shape and size has motivated the development of a number of new techniques, leading to the study of electron transfer and redox catalysis on single nanoparticles.
This paper describes electrochemical and spectroscopic properties of a well-characterized, synthetically accessible, 1.1 nm diam Au nanoparticle, Au(38)(PhC(2)S)(24), where PhC(2)S is phenylethylthiolate. Properties of other Au(38) nanoparticles made by exchanging the monolayer ligands with different thiolate ligands are also described. Voltammetry of the Au(38) nanoparticles in CH(2)Cl(2) reveals a 1.62 V energy gap between the first one-electron oxidation and the first reduction. Based on a charging energy correction of ca. 0.29 V, the indicated HOMO-LUMO gap energy is ca. 1.33 eV. At low energies, the optical absorbance spectrum includes peaks at 675 nm (1.84 eV) and 770 nm (1.61 eV) and an absorbance edge at ca. 1.33 eV that gives an optical HOMO-LUMO gap energy that is consistent with the electrochemical estimate. The absorbance at lowest energy is bleached upon electrochemical depletion of the HOMO level. The complete voltammetry contains two separated doublets of oxidation waves, indicating two distinct molecular orbitals, and two reduction steps. The ligand-exchanged nanoparticle Au(38)(PEG(135)S)(13)(PhC(2)S)(11), where PEG(135)S is -SCH(2)CH(2)OCH(2)CH(2)OCH(3), exhibits a broad (1.77-0.89 eV) near-IR photoluminescence band resolvable into maxima at 902 nm (1.38 eV) and 1025 nm (1.2 eV). Much of the photoluminescence occurs at energies less than the HOMO-LUMO gap energy. A working model of the energy level structure of the Au(38) nanoparticle is presented.
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