Author/Authors :
Corneliu Ghica، نويسنده , , Petre Ionita، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Water soluble gold nanoparticles, obtained by
the reduction of the gold (III) chloride with sodium borohydride
in the presence of citric acid or thioctic acid, were
covered with a paramagnetic silica layer using the Stober
method, yielding a hybrid metallic-inorganic nanomaterial
(gold nanoparticles, with an average size of 5 nm,
embedded into silica nanoparticles, with an average size
of 100 nm). The paramagnetic silica layer was formed
by copolymerization of a paramagnetic silica precursor
(derived from 3-aminopropyltrimethoxysilane) with
tetramethyorthosilicate. The paramagnetic silica precursor
was obtained by coupling 3-aminopropyltrimethoxysilane
with 3-carboxy-proxyl free radical. TEM pictures show
that each silica nanoparticle of about 100 nm in size
embedded about 10 gold nanoparticles. These hybrid
nanoparticles are quite stable and exhibit the expected
paramagnetic characteristics, as seen by electron paramagnetic
resonance. The accessibility of methanol through
the silica layer was also studied. Depending on the capping
ligands of the gold nanoparticles (citric or thioctic acid),
different silica networks are formed, as seen by the
mobility of the spin-label inside the silica layer. The EPR
spectra showed that the paramagnetic silica layer is very
robust and the mobility of the spin-probe inside the silica
layer is very little affected by methanol. However, if spinlabeled
thioctic acid protected gold nanoparticles were
used in the material synthesis, the mobility of the spins
attached to the gold surface is quite high in the presence of
methanol, while the spins embedded into the silica layer
remains immobilized.