Gold–Mercury Nanoalloys: Au@Hg Nanoalloy Formation Through Direct Amalgamation: : Structural, Spectroscopic, and Computational Evidence for Slow Nanoscale Diffusion (Adv. Funct. Mater. 17/2011)

Mertens, Stijn F. L. and Gara, Matthew and Sologubenko, Alla S. and Mayer, Joachim and Szidat, Sönke and Krämer, Karl W. and Jacob, Timo and Schiffrin, David J. and Wandlowski, Thomas (2011) Gold–Mercury Nanoalloys: Au@Hg Nanoalloy Formation Through Direct Amalgamation: : Structural, Spectroscopic, and Computational Evidence for Slow Nanoscale Diffusion (Adv. Funct. Mater. 17/2011). Advanced Functional Materials, 21 (17). p. 3202. ISSN 1616-301X

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Abstract

Stirring gold nanoparticles in water with liquid mercury leads to alloy particles, in which the amount of mercury simply depends on the reaction time. On page 3259, Stijn F. L. Mertens and co-workers show that the large difference in cohesive energy between the alloying elements causes the slow inward diffusion of mercury over a fixed distance, independent of the mercury content. After a few days, the particles consist of a pure gold core (indicated in red in the image) surrounded by a solid solution of the two elements.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Advanced Functional Materials
Subjects:
?? goldmercurynanoalloysdiscrete dipole approximationdensity functional theory ??
ID Code:
133027
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
17 Apr 2019 15:30
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
12 Aug 2024 23:42