Nanostructure synthesis at the solid-water interface: spontaneous assembly and chemical transformations of tellurium nanorods.
T P Vinod, Natalya Froumin, Dimitry Mogiliansky, Leila Zeiri, Vladimir Ezersky, Raz Jelinek
Index: ChemPhysChem 15(14) , 3026-31, (2014)
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Abstract
Bottom-up synthesis offers novel routes to obtain nanostructures for nanotechnology applications. Most self-assembly processes are carried out in three dimensions (i.e. solutions); however, the large majority of nanostructure-based devices function in two dimensions (i.e. on surfaces). Accordingly, an essential and often cumbersome step in bottom-up applications involves harvesting and transferring the synthesized nanostructures from the solution onto target surfaces. We demonstrate a simple strategy for the synthesis and chemical transformation of tellurium nanorods, which is carried out directly at the solid-solution interface. The technique involves binding the nanorod precursors onto amine-functionalized surfaces, followed by in situ crystallization/oxidation. We show that the surface-anchored tellurium nanorods can be further transformed in situ into Ag2Te, Cu2Te, and SERS-active Au-Te nanorods. This new approach offers a way to construct functional nanostructures directly on surfaces.© 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
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