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Nano Lett. 2012 Oct 10;12(10):5292-8. doi: 10.1021/nl3029009. Epub 2012 Sep 21.

Crystallinity segregation upon selective self-assembling of gold colloidal single nanocrystals.

Nano letters

Hervé Portalès, Nicolas Goubet, Sergey Sirotkin, Eugène Duval, Alain Mermet, Pierre-Antoine Albouy, Marie-Paule Pileni

Affiliations

  1. Université Pierre et Marie Curie Paris 6, UMR 7070, LM2N, BP 52, 4 place Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France. [email protected]

PMID: 22989345 DOI: 10.1021/nl3029009

Abstract

Spontaneous separation of single from polycrystalline 5 nm gold nanocrystals (NCs) is observed in colloidal solution. This segregation takes place upon self-assembling of single crystalline NCs at the air-solvent interface and in precipitated superlattices. Polycrystalline NCs are observed to remain in the suspension. Transmission electron microscopy analysis of the size distribution of NCs issued from the different populations indicates that the NC size does not change from each other, excluding therefore any size segregation in this process. Using both low-frequency Raman scattering and X-ray diffraction provides reliable characterization of nanocrystallinity for each population of NCs, thus confirming the crystallinity segregation. The single crystalline NCs are found by electron diffraction to self-assemble into close-packed superlattices with long-range translational and orientational ordering, while polycrystalline NCs behave like spheres with no preferential orientation. The face-to-face orientational ordering, which is only observed for single crystalline NCs, supports the relevance of the specific crystallinity-related morphologies of these NCs in their better ability to self-assemble. Exploiting this spontaneous segregation would open up a simple alternative to other demanding routes for controlling crystallinity of nanocrystals and optimizing their properties for potential applications.

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