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Research sheds new light on structure of gold nanoparticles in water
by Staff Writers
Jyvaskylan, Finland (SPX) Jan 26, 2016


The researchers studied a previously identified molecularly precise nanocluster that has 102 gold atoms and 44 thiol ligands. Image courtesy Finnish IT Centre for Science. For a larger version of this image please go here.

Researchers at the University of Jyvaskyla, Finland, and Colorado State University, USA, have for the first time ever determined the dynamical behaviour of the ligand layer of a water-soluble gold nanocluster in solution.

The breakthrough opens a way towards controllable strategies for the functionalisation of ligated nanoparticles for applications. The work at the University of Jyvaskyla was supported by the Academy of Finland. The research was published in Nature Communications on 21 January 2016.

Nanometre-scale gold particles are intensively investigated for applications as catalysts, sensors, drug delivery devices and biological contrast agents and as components in photonics and molecular electronics. The smallest particles have metal cores of only 1-2 nm with a few tens to a couple of hundred gold atoms. Their metal cores are covered by a stabilising organic ligand layer.

The molecular formulas and solid-state atomic structure of many of these compounds, called "clusters", have been resolved during the past few years. Still, it is a considerable challenge to understand their atomic-scale structure and dynamical behaviour in the solution phase. This is crucial information that can help researchers understand how nanoclusters interact with the environment.

The researchers studied a previously identified molecularly precise nanocluster that has 102 gold atoms and 44 thiol ligands.. The solid-state structure of this cluster was resolved from single-crystal X-ray diffraction experiments in 2007.

The ligand shell has a low symmetry and produces a large number of signals in conventional proton-NMR measurement. The researchers achieved a full assignment of all signals to specific thiol ligands by using a combination of correlated nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments, density functional theory computations and molecular dynamics simulations.

The Finnish researchers at Jyvaskyla have previously used this specific cluster material, for instance, for structural studies of enteroviruses. (3)

"Now that we know exactly which ligand produces which NMR signal, we can proceed with precise studies on how this nanocluster interacts with the chemical and biological environment in the water phase.

"This gives unprecedented potential to understand and control the inorganic-organic interfaces that are relevant to hybrid inorganic-biological materials," says Academy Professor Hannu Hakkinen from the Nanoscience Center at the University of Jyvaskyla. Hakkinen coordinated the work of the Finnish-US team.

The researchers involved in the work are Kirsi Salorinne, Sami Malola, Xi Chen and Hannu Hakkinen from the University of Jyvaskyla, and O. Andrea Wong, Christopher D. Rithner and Christopher J. Ackerson from Colorado State University. The computational work was done at the CSC - the Finnish IT Centre for Science.


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