Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition , doi: 10.1002/anie.200704249 Nr. 02/2008 Silver-rich LumpsLarge cluster complexes with almost 500 silver atomsContact: Dieter Fenske, Universität Karlsruhe (Germany) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Synthesis and Crystal Structures of the Ligand-Stabilized Silver Chalcogenide Clusters [Ag154Se77(dppxy)18], [Ag320(StBu)60S130(dppp)12], [Ag352S128(StC5H11)96] and [Ag490S188(StC5H11)114]
Nanoscopic “lumps” of atoms, known as clusters, are the specialty of a
research team headed by Dieter Fenske from the University of Karlsruhe
and the Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe. The production and characterization
of clusters made of interesting semiconductor materials are a main focus
of this group. As reported in the journal Angewandte Chemie, the
team has now been able to synthesize four new, particularly large and
silver-rich clusters, and to determine their crystal structures.
Two or three-dimensional nanostructures of semiconductor materials are
of interest for future nanoelectronic applications. Such structures
could be built of arrays of clusters. A cluster is an accumulation of
atoms or molecules that includes hundreds or thousands of atoms. Tiny as
they are, to some degree clusters have completely properties to those of
“normal sized” (macroscopic) solid particles. This difference is caused
by the high surface-to-volume ratio. In order to precisely interpret the
measured physical properties of clusters, it is important to understand
the atomic structure of these nanoparticles.
One of the things Fenske and his team are working on is the synthesis of
metal-rich clusters of the elements sulfur, selenium, and tellurium (the
chalcogens). For the metallic component in these systems, the coinage
metals copper and silver are well suited. By using specially developed
synthetic methods, the scientists were able to make molecular cluster
complexes. In this process, cluster cores made of metal and chalcogen
atoms are surrounded by a protective shell of organic ligands. This
protective coat prevents the tiny lumps from aggregating into larger
particles or solids. This trick made it possible for the researchers to
make particularly large silver-rich clusters. The newest members of this
family of clusters consist of distorted spherical silver-chalcogenide
cores with diameters between two and four nanometers. Their surfaces are
protected with thiolate or phosphane ligands.
Characterizing the structures of such large metal-rich cluster complexes
by X-ray crystallographic studies is extremely difficult. It is actually
impossible to determine the exact composition. Defects in the crystal
lattice are one reason. The tendency to have defects increases as the
number of silver atoms grows. However, by using a combination of X-ray
diffraction, mass spectrometry, and electron microscopy, the researchers
did succeed in deriving idealized empirical formulas and idealized
atomic structures for their clusters. The most silver-rich compound
consists of clusters with approximately 490 silver and 188 sulfur atoms,
as well as 114 sulfur-organic ligands, and an idealized composition [Ag
490S188(StC5H11)114].
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