Bifunctional hexagonal Ni/NiO nanostructures: influence of the core-shell phase on magnetism, electrochemical sensing of serotonin, and catalytic reduction of 4-nitrophenol.
Manigandan RamadossDhanasekaran ThangaveluPadmanaban AnnamalaiKrishnan GiribabuSuresh RanganathanV NarayananPublished in: Nanoscale advances (2019)
Ni 0 /NiO (nickel/nickel oxide) core-shell nanostructures were synthesized through a facile combustible redox reaction. Remarkably, the hetero-phase boundary with different crystalline orientations offered dual properties, which helped in bifunctional catalysis. Presence of a metallic Ni phase changed physicochemical properties and some emerging applications (magnetic properties, optical conductivity, electrochemical sensitivity, catalytic behaviour) could be foreseen. Moreover, formation of a NiO layer on metal surface prevented magnetism-induced aggregation, arrested further oxidation by hindering oxygen diffusion, and acted as a good sorbent to enhance the surface adsorption of the analyte. Hexagonal Ni/NiO nanostructures manifested well-defined ferromagnetic behavior and the catalyst could be collected easily at the end of the catalytic reduction. Ni/NiO core-shell catalysts at the nanoscale had outstanding catalytic performance (reduction of 4-nitrophenol to 4-aminophenol) compared with pure NiO catalysts beyond a reaction time of ∼9 min. The estimated sensitivity, limit of detection and limit of quantification towards the electrochemical sensing of serotonin were 0.185, 0.43 and 1.47 μM μA -1 , respectively. These results suggest that a bifunctional Ni/NiO nanostructure could be a suitable catalyst for electrochemical detection of serotonin and reduction of 4-nitrophenol.
Keyphrases
- metal organic framework
- label free
- molecularly imprinted
- gold nanoparticles
- ionic liquid
- electron transfer
- highly efficient
- room temperature
- transition metal
- crystal structure
- high resolution
- nitric oxide
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- endothelial cells
- mass spectrometry
- diabetic rats
- quantum dots
- visible light
- oxide nanoparticles