Radiolysis-Driven Evolution of Gold Nanostructures – Model Verification by Scale Bridging in situ Liquid-Phase Transmission Electron Microscopy and X-ray Diffraction

08 April 2022, Version 2

Abstract

Formation and degradation of gold nanostructures in tetrachloroauric acid (HAuCl4) is comprehensively investigated via in situ liquid-phase transmission electron microscopy (LP-TEM). By introducing a novel technique to simulate arbitrary kinetic models for radiochemistry, we provide a holistic understanding of reaction mechanisms in irradiated HAuCl4 solutions, allowing for quantitative prediction and tailoring of redox processes in LP-TEM experiments. It is demonstrated that no experimentally relevant threshold for gold reduction during LP-TEM exists and that radiation-induced metal-ion reduction is relevant even for experiments utilizing X-rays such as X-ray diffraction (XRD). Furthermore, we unveil that oxidative etching of gold nanoparticles depends on both, precursor concentration, and dose rate. This dependency is harnessed to probe the electron beam-induced shift in the Gibbs free energy landscape by analyzing the critical radius of gold nanoparticles.

Keywords

kinetic modelling
radiolysis
liquid cell transmission electron microscopy
gold nanoparticles
particle growth
oxidative etching
critical radius
liquid phase transmission electron microscopy
in situ X-ray diffraction

Supplementary materials

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Title
Supporting Information to Radiolysis-Driven Evolution of Gold Nanostructures – Model Verification by Scale Bridging in situ Liquid-Phase Transmission Electron Microscopy and X-ray Diffraction
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Document providing supporting information referenced in the main manuscript.
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