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Ag29(BDT)12(TPP)4: A Tetravalent Nanocluster

The bottom-up assembly of nanoparticles into diverse ordered solids is a challenge because it requires nanoparticles, which are often quasi-spherical, to have interaction anisotropy akin to atoms and molecules. Typically, anisotropy has been introduced by changing the shape of the inorganic nanopart...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2015-09, Vol.137 (37), p.11970-11975
Main Authors: AbdulHalim, Lina G, Bootharaju, Megalamane S, Tang, Qing, Del Gobbo, Silvano, AbdulHalim, Rasha G, Eddaoudi, Mohamed, Jiang, De-en, Bakr, Osman M
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:The bottom-up assembly of nanoparticles into diverse ordered solids is a challenge because it requires nanoparticles, which are often quasi-spherical, to have interaction anisotropy akin to atoms and molecules. Typically, anisotropy has been introduced by changing the shape of the inorganic nanoparticle core. Here, we present the design, self-assembly, optical properties, and total structural determination of Ag29(BDT)12(TPP)4, an atomically precise tetravalent nanocluster (NC) (BDT, 1,3-benzenedithiol; TPP, triphenylphosphine). It features four unique tetrahedrally symmetrical binding surface sites facilitated by the supramolecular assembly of 12 BDT (wide footprint bidentate thiols) in the ligand shell. When each of these sites was selectively functionalized by a single phosphine ligand, particle stability, synthetic yield, and the propensity to self-assemble into macroscopic crystals increased. The solid crystallized NCs have a substantially narrowed optical band gap compared to that of the solution state, suggesting strong interparticle electronic coupling occurs in the solid state.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.5b04547