A stable droplet reactor for high temperature nanocrystal synthesisElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available: a) further experimental details, b) videos showing droplet formation within an operating device, c) theoretical phase diagrams showing the dripping/jetting boundary for the capillary droplet reactor, and d) TEM images with size distributions for droplet-synthesised CdSe and Ag nanocrystals.. See DOI: 10.1039/c0lc00507jPublished as part of a LOC themed issue dedicated to UK Research: Guest Editors Professors Hywel Morgan and Andrew deMello.

Autor: A. M. Nightingale, S. H. Krishnadasan, D. Berhanu, X. Niu, C. Drury, R. McIntyre, E. Valsami-Jones, J. C. deMello
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Zdroj: Lab on a Chip; Apr2011, Vol. 11 Issue 7, p1221-1227, 7p
Abstrakt: We report a versatile capillary-based droplet reactor for the controlled synthesis of nanoparticles over a wide range of flow conditions and temperatures. The reactor tolerates large flow-rate differentials between individual reagent streams, and allows droplet composition to be varied independently of residence time and volume. The reactor was successfully applied to the synthesis of metal (Ag), metal-oxide (TiO2) and compound semiconductor (CdSe) nanoparticles, and in each case exhibited stable droplet flow over many hours of operation without fouling, even for reactions involving solid intermediates. For CdSe formed by the reaction of Cd oleate and Se, highly controlled growth could be achieved at temperatures of up to 250 °C, with emission spectra varying smoothly and reproducibly with temperature and flow-rate. The droplet reactor showed exceptional stability when operated under constant flow-rate and temperature conditions, yielding particles with well-defined band-edge emission spectra that did not vary over the course of a full day’s continuous operation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index