Kida Tetsuya
Department of Energy and Material Sciences, Faculty of Engineering Sciences, Kyushu University, Kasuga-shi, Fukuoka 816-8580, Japan.
Langmuir. 2008 Aug 5;24(15):7648-50. doi: 10.1021/la801804w. Epub 2008 Jul 2.
Control of the morphology of gold nanoparticles has received considerable attention because the physical and chemical properties of gold depend significantly on its size and shape. A novel route for obtaining 2-D gold nanostructures has been developed in which chloroaurate ions (AuCl (4)(-)) are reduced at the 2-D interface between water and chloroform using an amphiphilic polyoxometallate (SiW (12)O (40)(4-))/surfactant (dimethyldioctadecylammonium; DODA) hybrid photocatalyst under UV irradiation at room temperature in air. This simple method can readily produce large single-crystalline gold nanosheets (lateral size, ca. 20 microm; thickness, ca. 150 nm).