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Aerosol Synthesis and Characterization of Heterogeneous Bimetallic Nanoparticles

Snellman, Markus LU (2023)
Abstract
As the proverbial noose tightens around humanity’s resource spending, research is focused on utilizing materials to their fullest potential. Nanotechnology is the ultimate way to economize by splitting objects into smaller parts and dispersing the material properties over greater surface to volume ratios. Emerging quantum effects at the nanoscale present unique tweaking opportunities in applications. This thesis deals with creating and characterizing heterogeneous nanoparticles, including Janus and core-shell nanoparticles: segregated structures where the different parts having different properties allow for multiple functionalities within individual units. Heterogeneous nanoparticles that have already attracted interest in fields ranging... (More)
As the proverbial noose tightens around humanity’s resource spending, research is focused on utilizing materials to their fullest potential. Nanotechnology is the ultimate way to economize by splitting objects into smaller parts and dispersing the material properties over greater surface to volume ratios. Emerging quantum effects at the nanoscale present unique tweaking opportunities in applications. This thesis deals with creating and characterizing heterogeneous nanoparticles, including Janus and core-shell nanoparticles: segregated structures where the different parts having different properties allow for multiple functionalities within individual units. Heterogeneous nanoparticles that have already attracted interest in fields ranging from catalysis to biotechnology are typically made by chemical methods. Here, aerosol technology has been used to realize these nanostructures, as such physical synthesis hold advantages in improved purity of
the product, and reduced waste from the process.

The two main approaches that have been developed in this work to create bimetallic heterogenous nanoparticles, surface segregation and condensational growth, both use spark ablation as the material source. From the optical emission in the electrical discharges, we use machine learning to determine the composition of bimetallic AuAg nanoparticles. Thermally induced surface segregation in CuAg agglomerates forming Janus and core-shell nanoparticles have been studied on- and off-line with aerosol metrology and electron microscopy. Compared to analogue works where the particles sit on a substrate, the aerosol phase is ideal to study surface segregation of “free” nanostructures. A more general route toward arbitrary metal-metal core-shell combinations is explored with condensational growth by thermal evaporation and photolysis. To understand the condensation inside a custom thermal evaporator designed in this work, a novel approach to measure the residence time distribution of aerosol nanoparticles is presented. Condensational growth of aerosol nanoparticles by
photolysis of metal-organic precursors is a new route that can be carried out at room temperature. The process therefore allows for formation of core-shell particles of miscible materials and avoids thermophoretic losses of particles experienced in conventional thermal evaporation.

Combining on-line compositional monitoring with the unique, precursor-less
pathways to create heterogeneous nanoparticles that aerosol technology enables, this thesis is a step toward more sustainable synthesis of tailored bimetallic nanostructures with applications in, for instance, catalysis, sensors, and electronics. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Dr. Seipenbusch, Martin, ParteQ GmbH & Stuttgart University, Germany.
organization
alternative title
Syntes och Karaktärisering av Heterogena Bimetalliska Nanopartiklar med Aerosolteknologi
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
nanoparticles, core-shell, Janus nanoparticles, aerosol technology, Fysicumarkivet A:2023 Snellman, Nanopartiklar, kärna-skal, Januspartiklar, aerosolteknologi
pages
101 pages
publisher
Department of Physics, Lund University
defense location
Lecture Hall Rydbergsalen, Department of Physics, Sölvegatan 14, Faculty of Engineering LTH, Lund University, Lund.
defense date
2023-12-01 09:15:00
ISBN
978-91-8039-874-9
978-91-8039-875-6
project
Undersökning av sinterprocesser genom studier av atomernas dynamik mellan nanopartiklar vid uppvärmning
Core@shell nanoparticles with precisely controlled shells
Aerosol Synthesis and Characterization of Heterogeneous Bimetallic Nanoparticles
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
1e2becf9-bda6-414b-8baa-c4bc5244014b
date added to LUP
2023-11-01 10:08:16
date last changed
2024-01-31 10:59:05
@phdthesis{1e2becf9-bda6-414b-8baa-c4bc5244014b,
  abstract     = {{As the proverbial noose tightens around humanity’s resource spending, research is focused on utilizing materials to their fullest potential. Nanotechnology is the ultimate way to economize by splitting objects into smaller parts and dispersing the material properties over greater surface to volume ratios. Emerging quantum effects at the nanoscale present unique tweaking opportunities in applications. This thesis deals with creating and characterizing heterogeneous nanoparticles, including Janus and core-shell nanoparticles: segregated structures where the different parts having different properties allow for multiple functionalities within individual units. Heterogeneous nanoparticles that have already attracted interest in fields ranging from catalysis to biotechnology are typically made by chemical methods. Here, aerosol technology has been used to realize these nanostructures, as such physical synthesis hold advantages in improved purity of <br/>the product, and reduced waste from the process.<br/><br/>The two main approaches that have been developed in this work to create bimetallic heterogenous nanoparticles, surface segregation and condensational growth, both use spark ablation as the material source. From the optical emission in the electrical discharges, we use machine learning to determine the composition of bimetallic AuAg nanoparticles. Thermally induced surface segregation in CuAg agglomerates forming Janus and core-shell nanoparticles have been studied on- and off-line with aerosol metrology and electron microscopy. Compared to analogue works where the particles sit on a substrate, the aerosol phase is ideal to study surface segregation of “free” nanostructures. A more general route toward arbitrary metal-metal core-shell combinations is explored with condensational growth by thermal evaporation and photolysis. To understand the condensation inside a custom thermal evaporator designed in this work, a novel approach to measure the residence time distribution of aerosol nanoparticles is presented. Condensational growth of aerosol nanoparticles by <br/>photolysis of metal-organic precursors is a new route that can be carried out at room temperature. The process therefore allows for formation of core-shell particles of miscible materials and avoids thermophoretic losses of particles experienced in conventional thermal evaporation. <br/><br/>Combining on-line compositional monitoring with the unique, precursor-less <br/>pathways to create heterogeneous nanoparticles that aerosol technology enables, this thesis is a step toward more sustainable synthesis of tailored bimetallic nanostructures with applications in, for instance, catalysis, sensors, and electronics.}},
  author       = {{Snellman, Markus}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-8039-874-9}},
  keywords     = {{nanoparticles; core-shell; Janus nanoparticles; aerosol technology; Fysicumarkivet A:2023 Snellman; Nanopartiklar; kärna-skal; Januspartiklar; aerosolteknologi}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  publisher    = {{Department of Physics, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Aerosol Synthesis and Characterization of Heterogeneous Bimetallic Nanoparticles}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/163510266/Markus_kappa_electronic.pdf}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}