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Molecular-Level Understanding of Continuous Growth from Iron-Oxo Clusters to Iron Oxide Nanoparticles

Cited 11 time in webofscience Cited 10 time in scopus
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Title
Molecular-Level Understanding of Continuous Growth from Iron-Oxo Clusters to Iron Oxide Nanoparticles
Author(s)
Hogeun Chang; Byung Hyo Kim; Jeong H.Y.; Moon J.H.; Park M.; Kwangsoo Shin; Sue In Chae; Jisoo Lee; Taegyu Kang; Back Kyu Choi; Jiwoong Yang; Megalamane S. Bootharaju; Hyoin Song; An S.H.; Park K.M.; Oh J.Y.; Lee H.; Myung Soo Kim; Jungwon Park; Taeghwan Hyeon
Publication Date
2019-05
Journal
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, v.141, no.17, pp.7037 - 7045
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Abstract
© 2019 American Chemical Society. The formation of inorganic nanoparticles has been understood based on the classical crystallization theory described by a burst of nucleation, where surface energy is known to play a critical role, and a diffusion-controlled growth process. However, this nucleation and growth model may not be universally applicable to the entire nanoparticle systems because different precursors and surface ligands are used during their synthesis. Their intrinsic chemical reactivity can lead to a formation pathway that deviates from a classical nucleation and growth model. The formation of metal oxide nanoparticles is one such case because of several distinct chemical aspects during their synthesis. Typical carboxylate surface ligands, which are often employed in the synthesis of oxide nanoparticles, tend to continuously remain on the surface of the nanoparticles throughout the growth process. They can also act as an oxygen source during the growth of metal oxide nanoparticles. Carboxylates are prone to chemical reactions with different chemical species in the synthesis such as alcohol or amine. Such reactions can frequently leave reactive hydroxyl groups on the surface. Herein, we track the entire growth process of iron oxide nanoparticles synthesized from conventional iron precursors, iron-oleate complexes, with strongly chelating carboxylate moieties. Mass spectrometry studies reveal that the iron-oleate precursor is a cluster comprising a tri-iron-oxo core and carboxylate ligands rather than a mononuclear complex. A combinatorial analysis shows that the entire growth, regulated by organic reactions of chelating ligands, is continuous without a discrete nucleation step
URI
https://pr.ibs.re.kr/handle/8788114/6465
DOI
10.1021/jacs.9b01670
ISSN
0002-7863
Appears in Collections:
Center for Nanoparticle Research(나노입자 연구단) > 1. Journal Papers (저널논문)
Files in This Item:
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