Litcius/Paper detail

Thermodynamics Model for Mechanochemical Synthesis of Gold Nanoparticles: Implications for Solvent-Free Nanoparticle Production

Lin Yang, Audrey Moores, Tomislav Friščić, Nikolas Provatas

2021ACS Applied Nano Materials17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mechanochemistry is becoming an established method for the sustainable, solid-phase synthesis of scores of nanomaterials and molecules, ranging from active pharmaceutical ingredients to materials for cleantech. Yet, we are still lacking a good model to rationalize experimental observations and develop a mechanistic understanding of the factors at play during mechanically assisted, solid-phase nanoparticle synthesis. We propose herein a structural-phase-field-crystal (XPFC) model with a ballistic driving force to describe such a process, with the specific example of the growth of gold nanoparticles in a two-component mixture. The reaction path is described in the context of the free energy landscape of the model, and dynamical simulations are performed based on phenomenological model parameters closely corresponding to the experimental conditions so as to draw conclusions on nanoparticle growth dynamics. It is shown that the ballistic term lowers the activation energy barrier of a reaction, enabling the reaction in a temperature regime compatible with experimental observations. The model also explains the mechanism of precipitated grain size reduction that is consistent with experimental observations. Our simulation results afford novel mechanistic insights into mechanosynthesis with implications for nanoparticle production and beyond.

Topics & Concepts

MechanosynthesisNanoparticleMechanochemistryMaterials scienceContext (archaeology)NanotechnologyNanomaterialsWork (physics)Non-equilibrium thermodynamicsPhenomenological modelCombustionMechanism (biology)Production (economics)NanostructureParticle (ecology)Activation energyChemical physicsMolecular dynamicsBiological systemEnergy (signal processing)ThermodynamicsBiochemical engineeringPlatinum nanoparticlesPath (computing)Reaction mechanismGrain sizeSolidification and crystal growth phenomenaCrystallography and molecular interactionsnanoparticles nucleation surface interactions