화학공학소재연구정보센터
Langmuir, Vol.23, No.2, 936-941, 2007
Electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance studies of the rectified quantized charging of gold nanoparticle multilayers
Electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance (EQCM) was employed to investigate the dynamics of rectified quantized charging of gold nanoparticle multilayers by in situ monitoring of the interfacial mass changes in aqueous solutions with varied electrolytes. EQCM measurements showed that interfacial mass changes only occurred at potentials more positive than the potential of zero charge (PZC), where nanoparticle quantized charging was well-defined, whereas in the negative potential regime where only featureless voltammetric responses were observed, the QCM frequency remained virtually invariant. This was ascribed to the fact that nanoparticle quantized charging was induced by the formation of ion-pairs between hydrophobic electrolyte anions (PF6-, ClO4-, BF4-, and NO3-) and positively charged gold nanoparticles. Based on the total frequency changes and the number of electrolyte anions adsorbed onto the particle layers, the number of water molecules that were involved in the ion-pairing processes was then quantitatively estimated at varied particle charge states, which was found to increase with increasing hydrophobicity of the anions. Additionally, the electron-transfer dynamics of the gold particle multilayers were also evaluated by electrochemical impedance measurements. It was found that the particle electron-transfer rate was about an order of magnitude slower than that of the ion diffusion and binding.