Exfoliation Technology for Scalable Ligand-Free Core-Semishell Metal Nanoparticle Films.
Seongyu LeeGumin KangJoonHyun KangHyungduk KoPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Core-shell metallic nanoparticles (NPs) are considered promising materials for their multifunctional properties. However, traditionally synthesized NPs have crucial issues that their ligands interfere with the direct interaction between NPs and neighboring materials, and it is very difficult to form a uniform film without the mixture of a template. In this article, we report an unprecedented exfoliation technology for fabricating a scalable ligand-free core-semishell metal NP film based on the evaporation system through a self-assembled monolayer-assisted surface energy control combined with a deep ultraviolet surface treatment around the core NPs. Owing to fabrication merits, the properties of the core-semishell NPs can be easily modulated depending on the shell material; the ligand-free core-shell NPs are directly attached to the surface of a material by Scotch tape, allowing interfacial interactions. Therefore, the proposed technique presents a new scientific method for studying interfacial interactions with heterogeneous materials and can be universally applied in optoelectronic devices, biopatches, photocatalysts, and so on.