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The non-stationary case of the Maxwell-Garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2D gold flakes) in solution

The solution-based growth mechanism is a common process for nanomaterials. The Maxwell-Garnett theory (for light–matter interactions) describes the solution growth in an effective medium, homogenized by a mean electromagnetic field, which applies when materials are in a stationary phase. However, th...

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Autores principales: Natarajan, Prakash, Shalabny, Awad, Sadhujan, Sumesh, Idilbi, Ahmad, Bashouti, Muhammad Y.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9419469/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133048
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9na00636b
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author Natarajan, Prakash
Shalabny, Awad
Sadhujan, Sumesh
Idilbi, Ahmad
Bashouti, Muhammad Y.
author_facet Natarajan, Prakash
Shalabny, Awad
Sadhujan, Sumesh
Idilbi, Ahmad
Bashouti, Muhammad Y.
author_sort Natarajan, Prakash
collection PubMed
description The solution-based growth mechanism is a common process for nanomaterials. The Maxwell-Garnett theory (for light–matter interactions) describes the solution growth in an effective medium, homogenized by a mean electromagnetic field, which applies when materials are in a stationary phase. However, the charge transitions (inter- and intra-transitions) during the growth of nanomaterials lead to a non-stationary phase and are associated with time-dependent permittivity constant transitions (for nanomaterials). Therefore, time-independence in the standard Maxwell-Garnett theory is lost, resulting in time dependence, ε(i)(t). This becomes important when the optical spectrum of a solution needs to be deconvoluted at different reaction times since each peak represents a specific charge/energy transfer with a specific permittivity constant. Based on this, we developed a time-resolved deconvolution approach, f(t) ∝ ε(i)(t), which led us to identify the transitions (inter- and intra-transitions) with their dominated growth regimes. Two gold ion peaks were precisely measured (322 nm and 367 nm) for the inter-transition, and three different polyaniline oxidation states (PAOS) for the intra-transition, including A (372 nm), B (680 nm), and C (530 nm). In the initial reaction time regime (0–90 min), the permittivity constant of gold was found to be highly dependent on time, i.e. f(E) ∝ ε(i)(t), since charge transfer takes place from the PAOS to gold ions (i.e. inter-transition leads to a reduction reaction). In the second time regime (90–180 min), the permittivity constant of gold changes as the material deforms from 3D to 2D (f(S) ∝ ε(3D–2D)), i.e. intra-transition (combined with thermal reduction). Our approach provides a new framework for the time-dependent modelling of (an)isotropic solutions of other nanomaterials and their syntheses.
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spelling pubmed-94194692022-09-20 The non-stationary case of the Maxwell-Garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2D gold flakes) in solution Natarajan, Prakash Shalabny, Awad Sadhujan, Sumesh Idilbi, Ahmad Bashouti, Muhammad Y. Nanoscale Adv Chemistry The solution-based growth mechanism is a common process for nanomaterials. The Maxwell-Garnett theory (for light–matter interactions) describes the solution growth in an effective medium, homogenized by a mean electromagnetic field, which applies when materials are in a stationary phase. However, the charge transitions (inter- and intra-transitions) during the growth of nanomaterials lead to a non-stationary phase and are associated with time-dependent permittivity constant transitions (for nanomaterials). Therefore, time-independence in the standard Maxwell-Garnett theory is lost, resulting in time dependence, ε(i)(t). This becomes important when the optical spectrum of a solution needs to be deconvoluted at different reaction times since each peak represents a specific charge/energy transfer with a specific permittivity constant. Based on this, we developed a time-resolved deconvolution approach, f(t) ∝ ε(i)(t), which led us to identify the transitions (inter- and intra-transitions) with their dominated growth regimes. Two gold ion peaks were precisely measured (322 nm and 367 nm) for the inter-transition, and three different polyaniline oxidation states (PAOS) for the intra-transition, including A (372 nm), B (680 nm), and C (530 nm). In the initial reaction time regime (0–90 min), the permittivity constant of gold was found to be highly dependent on time, i.e. f(E) ∝ ε(i)(t), since charge transfer takes place from the PAOS to gold ions (i.e. inter-transition leads to a reduction reaction). In the second time regime (90–180 min), the permittivity constant of gold changes as the material deforms from 3D to 2D (f(S) ∝ ε(3D–2D)), i.e. intra-transition (combined with thermal reduction). Our approach provides a new framework for the time-dependent modelling of (an)isotropic solutions of other nanomaterials and their syntheses. RSC 2019-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9419469/ /pubmed/36133048 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9na00636b Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Natarajan, Prakash
Shalabny, Awad
Sadhujan, Sumesh
Idilbi, Ahmad
Bashouti, Muhammad Y.
The non-stationary case of the Maxwell-Garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2D gold flakes) in solution
title The non-stationary case of the Maxwell-Garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2D gold flakes) in solution
title_full The non-stationary case of the Maxwell-Garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2D gold flakes) in solution
title_fullStr The non-stationary case of the Maxwell-Garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2D gold flakes) in solution
title_full_unstemmed The non-stationary case of the Maxwell-Garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2D gold flakes) in solution
title_short The non-stationary case of the Maxwell-Garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2D gold flakes) in solution
title_sort non-stationary case of the maxwell-garnett theory: growth of nanomaterials (2d gold flakes) in solution
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9419469/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133048
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9na00636b
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