Anisotropic Metal Nanoparticles:  Synthesis, Assembly, and Optical Applications

Catherine J. Murphy(University of South Carolina Sumter), Tapan K. Sau(University of South Carolina Sumter), Anand Gole(University of South Carolina Sumter), Christopher J. Orendorff(University of South Carolina Sumter), Jinxin Gao(University of South Carolina Sumter), Linfeng Gou(University of South Carolina Sumter), Simona E. Hunyadi Murph(University of South Carolina Sumter), Tan Li(University of South Carolina Sumter)
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
June 18, 2005
Cited by 3,060

Abstract

This feature article highlights work from the authors' laboratories on the synthesis, assembly, reactivity, and optical applications of metallic nanoparticles of nonspherical shape, especially nanorods. The synthesis is a seed-mediated growth procedure, in which metal salts are reduced initially with a strong reducing agent, in water, to produce approximately 4 nm seed particles. Subsequent reduction of more metal salt with a weak reducing agent, in the presence of structure-directing additives, leads to the controlled formation of nanorods of specified aspect ratio and can also yield other shapes of nanoparticles (stars, tetrapods, blocks, cubes, etc.). Variations in reaction conditions and crystallographic analysis of gold nanorods have led to insight into the growth mechanism of these materials. Assembly of nanorods can be driven by simple evaporation from solution or by rational design with molecular-scale connectors. Short nanorods appear to be more chemically reactive than long nanorods. Finally, optical applications in sensing and imaging, which take advantage of the visible light absorption and scattering properties of the nanorods, are discussed.


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