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1.
Langmuir ; 22(18): 7873-80, 2006 Aug 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16922577

RESUMEN

The morphology and stability of well-ordered, nanostructured Au/TiO2(110) surfaces, prepared by deposition of Au loaded micelles on TiO2(110) substrates and subsequent oxidative removal of the polymer shell in an oxygen plasma, was investigated by noncontact AFM, SEM and XPS. The resulting arrays of Au nanoparticles (particle sizes 1-5 nm) form a nearly hexagonal pattern with well-defined interparticle distances and a narrow particle size distribution. Particle size and particle separation can be controlled independently by varying the Au loading and the block-copolymers in the micelle shell. The oxygen plasma treatment does not affect the size and distance of the Au nanoparticles; the latter are fully metallic after subsequent UHV annealing (400 degrees C). The particles are stable under typical CO oxidation reaction conditions, up to at least 200 degrees C, making these surfaces ideally suited as defined model systems for catalytic studies. Significant changes in the height distributions of the Au nanoparticles are found upon 400 degrees C annealing in O2. For adlayers with small interparticle distances, this leads to a bimodal particle size distribution, which together with the preservation of the lateral order points to Ostwald ripening.

2.
Chemphyschem ; 6(12): 2522-6, 2005 Dec 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16270368

RESUMEN

The magnetic properties of nanoparticles can be subject to strong variations as the chemical composition of the particle surface is modified. To study this interrelation of surface chemistry and magnetism, self-assembled layers of colloidal 9.5 nm Co/CoO core/shell nanoparticles were exposed to mild reactive hydrogen and oxygen plasmas. The consecutive oxygen/hydrogen plasma treatment transforms the particle layer into an array of metallic nanomagnets with complete reduction of the oxide and removal of the organic surfactants. The original arrangement of the particle array and the number of Co atoms per particle remains unchanged within the experimental error, and thus this is a possible route for the fabrication of ultrahigh-density magnetic bit structures from colloidal dispersions. The magnetic properties can be tuned by controlling the thickness of the surface oxide layer, which magnetically hardens the particles, as evidenced by element-specific magnetic hysteresis loops.

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