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Green and Sustainable Manufacture of Ultrapure Engineered Nanomaterials.

David Ortiz de ZárateCarlos García-MecaElena Pinilla CienfuegosJosé A AyúcarAmadeu GriolLaurent BellièresEsther HontañónFrank E KruisJavier Martí
Published in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
Nanomaterials with very specific features (purity, colloidal stability, composition, size, shape, location…) are commonly requested by cutting-edge technologic applications, and hence a sustainable process for the mass-production of tunable/engineered nanomaterials would be desirable. Despite this, tuning nano-scale features when scaling-up the production of nanoparticles/nanomaterials has been considered the main technological barrier for the development of nanotechnology. Aimed at overcoming these challenging frontier, a new gas-phase reactor design providing a shorter residence time, and thus a faster quenching of nanoclusters growth, is proposed for the green, sustainable, versatile, cost-effective, and scalable manufacture of ultrapure engineered nanomaterials (ranging from nanoclusters and nanoalloys to engineered nanostructures) with a tunable degree of agglomeration, composition, size, shape, and location. This method enables: (1) more homogeneous, non-agglomerated ultrapure Au-Ag nanoalloys under 10 nm; (2) 3-nm non-agglomerated ultrapure Au nanoclusters with lower gas flow rates; (3) shape-controlled Ag NPs; and (4) stable Au and Ag engineered nanostructures: nanodisks, nanocrosses, and 3D nanopillars. In conclusion, this new approach paves the way for the green and sustainable mass-production of ultrapure engineered nanomaterials.
Keyphrases
  • sensitive detection
  • quantum dots
  • energy transfer
  • visible light
  • photodynamic therapy
  • fluorescent probe
  • highly efficient
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • gold nanoparticles
  • light emitting