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Structural investigations of Au–Ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution

The physical properties of nanomaterials are determined by their structural features, making accurate structural control indispensable. This carries over to future applications. In the case of metal aerogels, highly porous networks of aggregated metal nanoparticles, such precise tuning is still larg...

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Autores principales: Kresse, Johannes, Georgi, Maximilian, Hübner, René, Eychmüller, Alexander
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10563840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37822903
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3na00359k
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author Kresse, Johannes
Georgi, Maximilian
Hübner, René
Eychmüller, Alexander
author_facet Kresse, Johannes
Georgi, Maximilian
Hübner, René
Eychmüller, Alexander
author_sort Kresse, Johannes
collection PubMed
description The physical properties of nanomaterials are determined by their structural features, making accurate structural control indispensable. This carries over to future applications. In the case of metal aerogels, highly porous networks of aggregated metal nanoparticles, such precise tuning is still largely pending. Although recent improvements in controlling synthesis parameters like electrolytes, reductants, or mechanical stirring, the focus has always been on one particular morphology at a time. Meanwhile, complex factors, such as morphology and element distributions, are studied rather sparsely. We demonstrate the capabilities of precise morphology design by deploying Au–Ni, a novel element combination for metal aerogels in itself, as a model system to combine common aerogel morphologies under one system for the first time. Au–Ni aerogels were synthesized via modified one- and two-step gelation, partially combined with galvanic replacement, to obtain aerogels with alloyed, heterostructural (novel metal aerogel structure of interconnected nanoparticles and nanochains), and hollow spherical building blocks. These differences in morphology are directly reflected in the physisorption behavior, linking the isotherm shape and pore size distribution to the structural features of the aerogels, including a broad-ranging specific surface area (35–65 m(2) g(−1)). The aerogels were optimized regarding metal concentration, destabilization, and composition, revealing some delicate structural trends regarding the ligament size and hollow sphere character. Hence, this work significantly improves the structural tailoring of metal aerogels and possible up-scaling. Lastly, preliminary ethanol oxidation tests demonstrated that morphology design extends to the catalytic performance. All in all, this work emphasizes the strengths of morphology design to obtain optimal structures, properties, and (performances) for any material application.
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spelling pubmed-105638402023-10-11 Structural investigations of Au–Ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution Kresse, Johannes Georgi, Maximilian Hübner, René Eychmüller, Alexander Nanoscale Adv Chemistry The physical properties of nanomaterials are determined by their structural features, making accurate structural control indispensable. This carries over to future applications. In the case of metal aerogels, highly porous networks of aggregated metal nanoparticles, such precise tuning is still largely pending. Although recent improvements in controlling synthesis parameters like electrolytes, reductants, or mechanical stirring, the focus has always been on one particular morphology at a time. Meanwhile, complex factors, such as morphology and element distributions, are studied rather sparsely. We demonstrate the capabilities of precise morphology design by deploying Au–Ni, a novel element combination for metal aerogels in itself, as a model system to combine common aerogel morphologies under one system for the first time. Au–Ni aerogels were synthesized via modified one- and two-step gelation, partially combined with galvanic replacement, to obtain aerogels with alloyed, heterostructural (novel metal aerogel structure of interconnected nanoparticles and nanochains), and hollow spherical building blocks. These differences in morphology are directly reflected in the physisorption behavior, linking the isotherm shape and pore size distribution to the structural features of the aerogels, including a broad-ranging specific surface area (35–65 m(2) g(−1)). The aerogels were optimized regarding metal concentration, destabilization, and composition, revealing some delicate structural trends regarding the ligament size and hollow sphere character. Hence, this work significantly improves the structural tailoring of metal aerogels and possible up-scaling. Lastly, preliminary ethanol oxidation tests demonstrated that morphology design extends to the catalytic performance. All in all, this work emphasizes the strengths of morphology design to obtain optimal structures, properties, and (performances) for any material application. RSC 2023-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10563840/ /pubmed/37822903 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3na00359k Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Kresse, Johannes
Georgi, Maximilian
Hübner, René
Eychmüller, Alexander
Structural investigations of Au–Ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution
title Structural investigations of Au–Ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution
title_full Structural investigations of Au–Ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution
title_fullStr Structural investigations of Au–Ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution
title_full_unstemmed Structural investigations of Au–Ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution
title_short Structural investigations of Au–Ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution
title_sort structural investigations of au–ni aerogels: morphology and element distribution
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10563840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37822903
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3na00359k
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