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Room Temperature Synthesis And Systematic Characterization Of Ultra-small Ceria NanoparticlesPatel, Chetak 01 January 2009 (has links)
Cerium oxide (ceria, CeOâ‚‚) is a rare earth oxide that has attracted wide-spread research interest because of its unique properties such as high mechanical strength, oxygen ion conductivity, oxygen storage capacity and autocatalytic property. In recent years, researchers have discovered that ceria nanoparticles (NPs) are capable of protecting cells from free radical induced damage. Interestingly, it was found that nanometer size (~ 5 nm) ceria can scavenge free radicals quite efficiently, thus acting as an anti-oxidant. This phenomenon has been explained based on the autocatalytic property of ceria NPs. Several methods have been developed for the synthesis of ceria NPs that include flame combustion, hydroxide co-precipitation, hydrothermal/solvothermal, microemulsion, sonochemical and microwave-assisted heating methods and sol-gel method. Ceria NPs synthesized by these methods are often highly aggregated. Furthermore, large scale synthesis of monodispersed CeOâ‚‚ NPs is quite challenging. Therefore it is desirable to synthesize ceria NPs in bulk quantity keeping its important properties intact, specifically free-radical scavenging property. The main goal of this study is therefore to synthesize ultra-small ([less than]5.0 nm), high quality monodispersed ceria NPs in large quantities. In this thesis work, I present a couple of room temperature techniques, dilute sodium hydroxide (NaOH) assisted and ethylenediamine (EN) assisted for the synthesis of nearly mono-dispersed, ultra-small ( < 5 nm) and water-dispersible ceria NPs. Morphology and particle size of the ceria NPs were investigated through high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). The HRTEM analysis confirmed the formation of 3.0 ± 0.5 nm size and 2.5 ± 0.2 nm size highlycrystalline ceria NPs when synthesized using dilute NaOH and EN as solvents, respectively. The nanostructures were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD) studies to determine the crystal structure and phase purity of the products. The samples were also thoroughly characterized by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) to determine the oxidation state of cerium ions. The presence of the +3 and +4 oxidation states in the samples was also confirmed from the XPS analysis. The co-existence of these two oxidation states is necessary for their applications as free radical scavenger. The autocatalytic behaviors of the ceria NPs were investigated through a hydrogen peroxide test and monitored by UV-visible transmission spectroscopy.
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Synthesis and analysis of Novel Platinum group Metal Chalcogenide Metal Quantum Dot and Electrochemical MarkersNxusani, Ezo January 2018 (has links)
Magister Scientiae - MSc (Chemistry) / Although cadmium and lead chalcogenide quantum dot have excellent optical and photoluminescent
properties that are highly favorable for biological applications, there still exists increasing concerns
due to the toxicity of these metals. We, therefore, report the synthesis of new aqueous soluble IrSe
quantum dot at room temperature utilizing a bottom-up wet chemistry approach. NaHSe and H2IrCl6
were utilized as the Se and Ir source, respectively. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy
reveals that the synthesized 3MPA-IrSe Qd are 3 nm in diameter. The characteristics and properties
of the IrSe Qd are investigated utilizing, Selected Area electron diffraction, ATR- Fourier Transform
Infra-Red Spectroscopy, Energy Dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, Photoluminescence, Cyclic
Voltammetry and chronocoulometry. A 3 fold increase in the optical band gap of IrSe quantum dot in
comparison to reported bulk IrSe is observed consistent with the effective mass approximation theory
for semiconductor materials of particles sizes < 10 nm. The PL emission of the IrSe quantum dot is at
519 nm. Their electro-activity is studied on gold electrodes and exhibit reduction and oxidation at -
107 mV and +641 mV, with lowered reductive potentials. The synthesized quantum dot are suitable
for low energy requiring electrochemical applications such as biological sensors and candidates for
further investigation as photoluminescent biological labels.
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