Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2006, 45, doi: 10.1002/anie.200602403 Nr. 43/2006 Platinum CagesLiposomes as blueprints for hollow platinum nanospheresContact: John A. Shelnutt, University of Georgia, Athens (USA) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Synthesis of Platinum Nanocages by Using Liposomes Containing Photocatalyst Molecules
It looks like lather under an electron microscope: American researchers
have successfully produced porous, nanoscopic, hollow platinum spheres
by using liposomes as blueprints.
Tiny structures made of precious metals are of interest because of their
broad spectrum of biomedical, catalytic, and optical applications.
Porous nanospheres, for example, are ideal for catalytic applications
that require large surfaces but can work at low concentration (and
consequently with little material). Previous production methods had a
disadvantage in that the spheres consisted of individual metallic
nanoparticles; these were not very stable and only relatively small
spheres were accessible. A team at the Sandia National Laboratories and
the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque as well as the University of
Georgia in Athens has now developed a clever new technique for the
production of relatively large porous platinum nanocages. These spheres
do not consist of individual particles, but of continuous, branched
(dendritic) platinum sheets.
Liposomes are familiar to us from creams: the tiny balls of fat carry
active ingredients through the skin. In the liposome that researchers
working with John A. Shelnutt used as a blueprint, the mantle of fat
consists of a double lipid layer. The narrow space between the two
layers contains a light-activated catalyst, a tin-containing porphyrin
compound. (Porphyrin frameworks are also an important component of
hemoglobin.) The liposomes are placed in a solution containing a
platinum salt. When these liposomes are then irradiated with light, the
photocatalyst transfers electrons to the platinum ions. The resulting
uncharged platinum atoms gather into tiny clumps. Once these clumps
reach a certain size, they also become active and catalyze the release
of more platinum atoms from the platinum salt. Atom by atom, small,
flat, branched platinum structures (dendrites) form within the double
lipid layer. These continue to grow until all of the platinum salt is
consumed. The important thing is to make sure that the number of tin
photocatalyst molecules—and thus the initial number of platinum
clumps—within the liposome double layer is very high. The resulting
dendrites are then close enough to each other to grow into a network;
this forms a solid but porous sphere with the same size and shape as the
liposome. When the liposomes are broken up, the platinum spheres remain
intact. Shelnutt, his collaborator Yujiang Song, and their team were
able to produce spheres with diameters up to 200 nm. These platinum
spheres aggregate into foam-like structures.
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