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1.
For the first time total structure determination of homoleptic alkynyl‐protected gold nanoclusters is reported. The nanoclusters are synthesized by direct reduction of PhC≡CAu, to give Au44(PhC≡C)28 and Au36(PhC≡C)24. The Au44 and Au36 nanoclusters have fcc‐type Au36 and Au28 kernels, respectively, as well as surrounding PhC≡C‐Au‐C2(Ph)Au‐C≡CPh dimeric “staples” and simple PhC≡C bridges. The structures of Au44(PhC≡C)28 and Au36(PhC≡C)24 are similar to Au44(SR)28 and Au36(SR)24, but the UV/Vis spectra are different. The protecting ligands influence the electronic structures of nanoclusters significantly. The synthesis of these two alkynyl‐protected gold nanoclusters indicates that a series of gold nanoclusters in the general formula Aux (RC≡C)y as counterparts to Aux (SR)y can be expected.  相似文献   

2.
The structural features that render gold nanoclusters intrinsically fluorescent are currently not well understood. To address this issue, highly fluorescent gold nanoclusters have to be synthesized, and their structures must be determined. We herein report the synthesis of three fluorescent Au24(SR)20 nanoclusters (R=C2H4Ph, CH2Ph, or CH2C6H4tBu). According to UV/Vis/NIR, differential pulse voltammetry (DPV), and X‐ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) analysis, these three nanoclusters adopt similar structures that feature a bi‐tetrahedral Au8 kernel protected by four tetrameric Au4(SR)5 motifs. At least two structural features are responsible for the unusual fluorescence of the Au24(SR)20 nanoclusters: Two pairs of interlocked Au4(SR)5 staples reduce the vibration loss, and the interactions between the kernel and the thiolate motifs enhance electron transfer from the ligand to the kernel moiety through the Au?S bonds, thereby enhancing the fluorescence. This work provides some clarification of the structure–fluorescence relationship of such clusters.  相似文献   

3.
We report the controlled growth of Au25(SR)18 and Au38 (SR)24 (where R = CH2CH2Ph) nanoclusters of molecular purity via size-focusing from the same crude product that contains a distribution of nanoclusters. In this method, gold salt was first mixed with tetraoctylammonium bromide (TOAB), and then reacted with excess thiol to form Au(I)-SR polymers in THF (as opposed to toluene in previous work), followed by NaBH 4 reduction. The resultant crude product contains polydisperse nanoclusters and was then used as the common starting material for controlled growth of Au25(SR)18 and Au38(SR)24 , respectively. In Route I, Au25(SR)18 nanoclusters of molecular purify were produced from the crude product after 6 h aging at room temperature. In Route II, the crude product was isolated and further subjected to thermal thiol etching in a toluene solution containing excess thiol, and one obtained pure Au38(SR)24 nanoclusters, instead of Au25(SR)18 . This work not only provides a robust and simple method to prepare both Au25(SR)18 and Au38(SR)24 nanoclusters, but also reveals that these two nanoclusters require different environments for the size-focusing growth process.  相似文献   

4.
A 23‐gold‐atom nanocluster was prepared by NaBH4‐mediated reduction of a solution of PhC?CAu and Ph3PAuSbF6 in CH2Cl2. The cluster composition was determined to be [Au23(PhC?C)9(Ph3P)6]2+ and single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction revealed that the cluster has an unprecedented Au17 kernel protected by three PhC2‐Au‐C2(Ph)‐Au‐C2Ph motifs and six Ph3P groups. The Au17 core can be viewed as the fusion of two Au10 units sharing a Au3 triangle. Electronic structure analysis from DFT calculations suggests that the stability of this unusual 12‐electron cluster is a result of the splitting of the superatomic 1D orbitals under D3h symmetry of the Au17 kernel. The discovery and determination of the structure of the Au23 cluster demonstrates the versatility of the alkynyl ligand in leading to the formation of new cluster compounds.  相似文献   

5.
In this work, the effects of thiolate ligands (‐SR, e.g., chain length and functional moiety) on the accessibility and catalytic activity of thiolate‐protected gold nanoclusters (e.g., Au25(SR)18) for 4‐nitrophenol hydrogenation is reported. The data suggest that Au25(SR)18 bearing a shorter alkyl chain shows a better accessibility to the substrates (shown by shorter induction time, t0) and a higher catalytic activity (shown by higher apparent reaction rate constant, kapp). The functional moiety of the ligands is another determinant factor, which clearly suggests that ligand engineering of Au25(SR)18 would be an efficient platform for fine‐tuning its catalytic properties.  相似文献   

6.
We report a NaOH‐mediated NaBH4 reduction method for the synthesis of mono‐, bi‐, and tri‐thiolate‐protected Au25 nanoclusters (NCs) with precise control of both the Au core and thiolate ligand surface. The key strategy is to use NaOH to tune the formation kinetics of Au NCs, i.e., reduce the reduction ability of NaBH4 and accelerate the etching ability of free thiolate ligands, leading to a well‐balanced reversible reaction for rapid formation of thermodynamically favorable Au25 NCs. This protocol is facile, rapid (≤3 h), versatile (applicable for various thiolate ligands), and highly scalable (>1 g Au NCs). In addition, bi‐ and tri‐thiolate‐protected Au25 NCs with adjustable ratios of hetero‐thiolate ligands were easily obtained. Such ligand precision in molecular ratios, spatial distribution and uniformity resulted in richly diverse surface landscapes on the Au NCs consisting of multiple functional groups such as carboxyl, amine, and hydroxy. Analysis based on NMR spectroscopy revealed that the hetero‐ligands on the NCs are well distributed with no ligand segregation. The unprecedented synthesis of multi‐thiolate‐protected Au25 NCs may further promote the practical applications of functional metal NCs.  相似文献   

7.
The structure of nanoparticles plays a critical role in dictating their material properties. Gold is well known to adopt face‐centered cubic (fcc) structure. Herein we report the first observation of a body‐centered cubic (bcc) gold nanocluster composed of 38 gold atoms protected by 20 adamantanethiolate ligands and two sulfido atoms ([Au38S2(SR)20], where R=C10H15) as revealed by single‐crystal X‐ray crystallography. This bcc structure is in striking contrast with the fcc structure of bulk gold and conventional Au nanoparticles, as well as the bi‐icosahedral structure of [Au38(SCH2CH2Ph)24]. The bcc nanocluster has a distinct HOMO–LUMO gap of ca. 1.5 eV, much larger than the gap (0.9 eV) of the bi‐icosahedral [Au38(SCH2CH2Ph)24]. The unique structure of the bcc gold nanocluster may be promising in catalytic applications.  相似文献   

8.
To use atomically precise metal nanoclusters (NCs) in various application fields, it is essential to establish size-selective synthesis methods for the metal NCs. Studies on thiolate (SR)-protected gold NCs (Aun(SR)m NCs) revealed that the atomically precise Aun(SR)m NC, which has a different chemical composition from the precursor, can be synthesized size-selectively by inducing transformation in the framework structure of the metal NCs by a ligand-exchange reaction. In this study, we selected the reaction of [Au25(SC2H4Ph)18] (SC2H4Ph = 2-phenylethanethiolate) with 4-tert-butylbenzenethiol (tBuPhSH) as a model ligand-exchange reaction and attempted to obtain new metal NCs by changing the amount of thiol, the central atom of the precursor NCs, or the reaction time from previous studies. The results demonstrated that [Au23(SPhtBu)17]0, [Au26Pd(SPhtBu)20]0 (Pd = palladium) and [Au24Pt(SC2H4Ph)7(SPhtBu)11]0 (Pt = platinum) were successfully synthesized in a high proportion. To best of our knowledge, no report exists on the selective synthesis of these three metal NCs. The results of this study show that a larger variety of metal NCs could be synthesized size-selectively than at present if the ligand-exchange reaction is conducted while changing the reaction conditions and/or the central atoms of the precursor metal NCs from previous studies.

This study succeeded in obtaining three new thiolate protected metal nanoclusters by changing the ligand-exchange condition from previous studies.  相似文献   

9.
Decreasing the core size is one of the best ways to study the evolution from AuI complexes into Au nanoclusters. Toward this goal, we successfully synthesized the [Au18(SC6H11)14] nanocluster using the [Au18(SG)14] (SG=L ‐glutathione) nanocluster as the starting material to react with cyclohexylthiol, and determined the X‐ray structure of the cyclohexylthiol‐protected [Au18(C6H11S)14] nanocluster. The [Au18(SR)14] cluster has a Au9 bi‐octahedral kernel (or inner core). This Au9 inner core is built by two octahedral Au6 cores sharing one triangular face. One transitional gold atom is found in the Au9 core, which can also be considered as part of the Au4(SR)5 staple motif. These findings offer new insight in terms of understanding the evolution from [AuI(SR)] complexes into Au nanoclusters.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Understanding the origin and structural basis of the photoluminescence (PL) phenomenon in thiolate-protected metal nanoclusters is of paramount importance for both fundamental science and practical applications. It remains a major challenge to correlate the PL properties with the atomic-level structure due to the complex interplay of the metal core (i.e. the inner kernel) and the exterior shell (i.e. surface Au(i)-thiolate staple motifs). Decoupling these two intertwined structural factors is critical in order to understand the PL origin. Herein, we utilize two Au28(SR)20 nanoclusters with different –R groups, which possess the same core but different shell structures and thus provide an ideal system for the PL study. We discover that the Au28(CHT)20 (CHT: cyclohexanethiolate) nanocluster exhibits a more than 15-fold higher PL quantum yield than the Au28(TBBT)20 nanocluster (TBBT: p-tert-butylbenzenethiolate). Such an enhancement is found to originate from the different structural arrangement of the staple motifs in the shell, which modifies the electron relaxation dynamics in the inner core to different extents for the two nanoclusters. The emergence of a long PL lifetime component in the more emissive Au28(CHT)20 nanocluster reveals that its PL is enhanced by suppressing the nonradiative pathway. The presence of long, interlocked staple motifs is further identified as a key structural parameter that favors the luminescence. Overall, this work offers structural insights into the PL origin in Au28(SR)20 nanoclusters and provides some guidelines for designing luminescent metal nanoclusters for sensing and optoelectronic applications.

Two Au28(SR)20 nanoclusters with an identical core but different shells exhibit a ∼15-fold difference in photoluminescence.  相似文献   

12.
Although face‐centered cubic (fcc), body‐centered cubic (bcc), hexagonal close‐packed (hcp), and other structured gold nanoclusters have been reported, it was unclear whether gold nanoclusters with mix‐packed (fcc and non‐fcc) kernels exist, and the correlation between kernel packing and the properties of gold nanoclusters is unknown. A Au49(2,4‐DMBT)27 nanocluster with a shell electron count of 22 has now been been synthesized and structurally resolved by single‐crystal X‐ray crystallography, which revealed that Au49(2,4‐DMBT)27 contains a unique Au34 kernel consisting of one quasi‐fcc‐structured Au21 and one non‐fcc‐structured Au13 unit (where 2,4‐DMBTH=2,4‐dimethylbenzenethiol). Further experiments revealed that the kernel packing greatly influences the electrochemical gap (EG) and the fcc structure has a larger EG than the investigated non‐fcc structure.  相似文献   

13.
An atomic‐level strategy is devised to gain insight into the origin of nanogold catalysis by using atomically monodisperse Aun(SR)m nanoclusters as well‐defined catalysts for styrene oxidation. The Aun(SR)m nanoclusters are emerging as a new class of gold nanocatalyst to overcome the polydispersity of conventional nanoparticle catalysts. The unique atom‐packing structure and electronic properties of Aun(SR)m nanoclusters (<2 nm) are rationalized to be responsible for their extraordinary catalytic activity observed in styrene oxidation. An interesting finding is that quantum size effects of Aun(SR)m nanoclusters, rather than the higher specific surface area, play a major role in gold‐catalyzed selective oxidation of styrene. For example, Au25(SR)18 nanoclusters (≈1 nm) are found to be particularly efficient in activating O2, which is a key step in styrene oxidation, and hence, the ultrasmall Au25 catalyst exhibits higher activity than do larger sizes. This atomic‐level strategy has allowed us to obtain an important insight into some fundamental aspects of nanogold catalysis in styrene oxidation. The ultrasmall yet robust Aun(SR)m nanoclusters are particularly promising for studying the mechanistic aspects of nanogold catalysis and for future design of better catalysts with high activity and selectivity for certain chemical processes.  相似文献   

14.
An alkynyl‐protected gold nanocluster [Au24(C?CPh)14(PPh3)4](SbF6)2 has been prepared by a direct reduction method. Single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction reveals that the molecular structure contains a Au22 core that is made of two Au13‐centered cuboctahedra that share a square face. Two staple‐like PhC?C? Au? C?CPh motifs are located around the center of the rod‐like Au22 core. This Au24 nanocluster is highly emissive in the near‐infrared region with λmax=925 nm and the nature of the HOMO–LUMO transition is investigated by time‐dependent DFT calculations.  相似文献   

15.
Ligands play an important role in determining the atomic arrangement within the metal nanoclusters. Here, we report a new nanocluster [Au23?xAgx(S‐Adm)15] protected by bulky adamantanethiol ligands which was obtained through a one‐pot synthesis. The total structure of [Au23?xAgx(S‐Adm)15] comprises an Au13?xAgx icosahedral core, three Au3(SR)4 units, and one AgS3 staple motif in contrast to the 15‐atom bipyramidal core previously seen in [Au23?xAgx(SR)16]. UV/Vis spectroscopy indicates that the HOMO–LUMO gap of [Au23?xAgx(S‐Adm)15] is 1.5 eV. DFT calculations reveal that [Au19Ag4(S‐Adm)15] is the most stable structure among all structural possibilities. Benefitting from Ag doping, [Au23?xAgx(S‐Adm)15] exhibits drastically improved photocatalytic activity for the degradation of rhodamine B (RhB) and phenol under visible‐light irradiation compared to Au23 nanoclusters.  相似文献   

16.
Unravelling the atomic structures of small gold clusters is the key to understanding the origin of metallic bonds and the nucleation of clusters from organometallic precursors. Herein we report the X‐ray crystal structure of a charge‐neutral [Au18(SC6H11)14] cluster. This structure exhibits an unprecedented bi‐octahedral (or hexagonal close packing) Au9 kernel protected by staple‐like motifs including one tetramer, one dimer, and three monomers. Until the present, the [Au18(SC6H11)14] cluster is the smallest crystallographically characterized gold cluster protected by thiolates and provides important insight into the structural evolution with size. Theoretical calculations indicate charge transfer from surface to kernel for the HOMO–LUMO transition.  相似文献   

17.
The role of the spin‐orbit coupling in Au38(SR)24, as a representative case for a superatomic molecules is studied to offer a complete view of the relativistic effect in heavy elements clusters. Its core can be described in as an analog to a diatomic molecule, such as F2, allowing the electronic structure to be depicted in terms of the D∞h point group. First, we showed the electronic structure under the spin‐orbit framework using total angular momentum representations ( j = ± s ; spinors), which allows us to characterize the expected splitting of certain levels derived from the cluster core. Accordingly, the optical properties are evaluated under spin‐orbit coupling regime, revealing differences in the low‐energy region of the absorption spectrum. Lastly, the variation of electron affinity (EA) and ionization potential (IP) properties is evaluated. This reveals characteristic consequences of the inclusion of spin‐orbit coupling in Au38(SR)24, as a bridge to larger thiolate‐protected gold clusters.  相似文献   

18.
We report the X‐ray structure of a gold nanocluster with 30 gold atoms protected by 18 1‐adamantanethiolate ligands (formulated as Au30(S‐Adm)18). This nanocluster exhibits a threefold rotationally symmetrical, hexagonal‐close‐packed (HCP) Au18 kernel protected by six dimeric Au2(SR)3 staple motifs. This new structure is distinctly different from the previously reported Au30S(S‐tBu)18 nanocluster protected by 18 tert‐butylthiolate ligands and one sulfido ligand with a face‐centered cubic (FCC) Au22 kernel. The Au30(S‐Adm)18 nanocluster has an anomalous solubility (it is only soluble in benzene but not in other common solvents). This work demonstrates a ligand‐based strategy for controlling nanocluster structure and also provides a method for the discovery of possibly overlooked clusters because of their anomalous solubility.  相似文献   

19.
The coherent vibrational dynamics of gold nanoclusters (NCs) provides important information on the coupling between vibrations and electrons as well as their mechanical properties, which is critical for understanding the evolution from a metallic state to a molecular state with diminishing size. Coherent vibrations have been widely explored in small-sized atomically precise gold NCs, while it remains a challenge to observe them in large-sized gold NCs. In this work, we report the coherent vibrational dynamics of atomically precise Au144(SR)60 NCs via temperature-dependent femtosecond transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy. The population dynamics of Au144(SR)60 consists of three relaxation processes: internal conversion, core–shell charge transfer and relaxation to the ground state. After removing the population dynamics from the TA kinetics, fast Fourier transform analysis on the residual oscillation reveals distinct vibrational modes at 1.5 THz (50 cm−1) and 2 THz (67 cm−1), which arise from the wavepacket motions along the ground-state and excited-state potential energy surfaces (PES), respectively. These results are helpful for understanding the physical properties of gold nanostructures with a threshold size that lies in between those of molecular-like NCs and metallic-state nanoparticles.

The coherent vibrational dynamics of Au144(SR)60 nanoclusters was revealed by temperature-dependent ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy. Both excited-state and ground-state wavepacket motions contribute to the vibrational coherence.  相似文献   

20.
Total structure determination of a ligand‐protected gold nanocluster, Au144, has been successfully carried out. The composition of title nanocluster is Au144(C≡CAr)60 ( 1 ; Ar=2‐FC6H4‐). The cluster 1 exhibits a quasi‐spherical Russian doll‐like architecture, comprising a Au54 two‐shelled Mackay icosahedron (Au12@Au42), which is further enclosed by a Au60 anti‐Mackay icosahedral shell. The Au114 kernel is enwrapped by thirty linear ArC≡C‐Au‐C≡CAr staple motifs. The absorption spectrum of 1 shows two bands at 560 and 620 nm. This spectrum is distinctly different from that of thiolated Au144, which was predicted to have an almost identical metal kernel and very similar ligands arrangement in 1 . These facts indicate the molecule‐like behavior of 1 and significant involvement of ligands in the electronic structure of 1 . The cluster 1 is hitherto the largest coinage metal nanocluster with atomically precise molecular structure in the alkynyl family. The work not only addresses the concern of structural information of Au144, which had been long‐pursued, but also provides an interesting example showing ligand effects on the optical properties of ligand protected metal nanoclusters.  相似文献   

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