posted on 2021-12-17, 00:43authored byZiwei Ye, Chunchun Li, Maurizio Celentano, Matthew Lindley, Tamsin O’Reilly, Adam J. Greer, Yiming Huang, Christopher Hardacre, Sarah J. Haigh, Yikai Xu, Steven E. J. Bell
Spiky/hollow metal
nanoparticles have applications across a broad
range of fields. However, the current bottom-up methods for producing
spiky/hollow metal nanoparticles rely heavily on the use of strongly
adsorbing surfactant molecules, which is undesirable because these
passivate the product particles’ surfaces. Here we report a
high-yield surfactant-free synthesis of spiky hollow Au–Ag
nanostars (SHAANs). Each SHAAN is composed of >50 spikes attached
to a hollow ca. 150 nm diameter cubic core, which makes SHAANs highly
plasmonically and catalytically active. Moreover, the surfaces of
SHAANs are chemically exposed, which gives them significantly enhanced
functionality compared with their surfactant-capped counterparts,
as demonstrated in surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) and
catalysis. The chemical accessibility of the pristine SHAANs also
allows the use of hydroxyethyl cellulose as a weakly bound stabilizing
agent. This produces colloidal SHAANs that remain stable for >1
month
while retaining the functionalities of the pristine particles and
allows even single-particle SERS to be realized.