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Optimizing the Binding Energy of the Surfactant to Iron Oxide Yields Truly Monodisperse Nanoparticles

38

Citations

66

References

2018

Year

Abstract

Despite the great progress in the synthesis of iron oxide nanoparticles (NPs) using a thermal decomposition method, the production of NPs with low polydispersity index is still challenging. In a thermal decomposition synthesis, oleic acid (OAC) and oleylamine (OAM) are used as surfactants. The surfactants bind to the growth species, thereby controlling the reaction kinetics and hence playing a critical role in the final size and size distribution of the NPs. Finding an optimum molar ratio between the surfactants oleic OAC/OAM is therefore crucial. A systematic experimental and theoretical study, however, on the role of the surfactant ratio is still missing. Here, we present a detailed experimental study on the role of the surfactant ratio in size distribution. We found an optimum OAC/OAM ratio of 3 at which the synthesis yielded truly monodisperse (polydispersity less than 7%) iron oxide NPs without employing any post synthesis size-selective procedures. We performed molecular dynamics simulations and showed that the binding energy of oleate to the NP is maximized at an OAC/OAM ratio of 3. The optimum OAC/OAM ratio of 3 is allowed for the control of the NP size with nanometer precision by simply changing the reaction heating rate. The optimum OAC/OAM ratio has no influence on the crystallinity and the superparamagnetic behavior of the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> NPs and therefore can be adopted for the scaled-up production of size-controlled monodisperse Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> NPs.

References

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