Since Faraday's pioneering work on gold colloids, tremendous scientific research on plasmonic gold nanoparticles has been carried out, but no atomically precise Au nanocrystals have been achieved. This work reports the first example of gold nanocrystal molecules. Mass spectrometry analysis has determined its formula to be Au 333(SR) 79 (R = CH 2CH 2Ph). This magic sized nanocrystal molecule exhibits fcc-crystallinity and surface plasmon resonance at approximately 520 nm, hence, a metallic nanomolecule. Simulations have revealed that atomic shell closing largely contributes to the particular robustness of Au 333(SR) 79, albeit the number of free electrons (i.e., 333-79 = 254) is also consistent with electron shell closing based on calculations using a confined free electron model. Guided by the atomic shell closing growth mode, we have also found the next larger size of extraordinarily stability to be Au ∼530(SR) ∼100 after a size-focusing selection - which selects the robust size available in the starting polydisperse nanoparticles. This work clearly demonstrates that atomically precise nanocrystal molecules are achievable and that the factor of atomic shell closing contributes to their extraordinary stability compared to other sizes. Overall, this work opens up new opportunities for investigating many fundamental issues of nanocrystals, such as the formation of metallic state, and will have potential impact on condensed matter physics, nanochemistry, and catalysis as well.
CITATION STYLE
Qian, H., Zhu, Y., & Jin, R. (2012). Atomically precise gold nanocrystal molecules with surface plasmon resonance. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(3), 696–700. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1115307109
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