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Kinetic effects of halide ions on the morphological evolution of silver nanoplates

journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by Bin TangBin Tang, S Xu, J An, B Zhao, W Xu, J Lombardi
Time-resolved extinction spectroscopy is employed to study the reaction kinetics in the shape-conversion reaction involving halide ions (including Cl-, Br- and I-) etching (sculpturing) silver nanoplates. A series of time-resolved extinction spectra are obtained during the in situ etching process and the evolution of surface plasmon resonance (SPR) of the silver nanoparticles is analyzed. Spectral analysis indicates that the conversion of nanoprisms starts simultaneously with the emergence of nanodisks when the halide ions are added. The etching rate of different halide ions is evaluated through the in-plane dipole resonance peak intensity of silver nanoplates vs. the reaction time (dI/dt). The relationship between the etching rate and the halide ion concentration shows that the halide ion etching reaction can be considered as a pseudo-first-order reaction. The effect of different halide ions on the shape-conversion of silver nanoplates is compared in detail. The activation energy of the etching reaction is calculated, which indicates that the etching ability of different halide ions is on the order of Cl - < I- < Br-.

History

Journal

Physical chemistry chemical physics

Volume

11

Issue

44

Pagination

10286 - 10292

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Location

London, England

ISSN

1463-9076

eISSN

1463-9084

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Owner Societies