The Structure and Bonding of Au25 (SR) 18 Nanoclusters from EXAFS

Jun 30, 2011 - Department of Chemistry and Institute for Research in Materials, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, B3H 4J3, Canada. Huifeng Qian and ...
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The Structure and Bonding of Au25(SR)18 Nanoclusters from EXAFS: The Interplay of Metallic and Molecular Behavior Mark A. MacDonald, Daniel M. Chevrier, and Peng Zhang* Department of Chemistry and Institute for Research in Materials, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, B3H 4J3, Canada

Huifeng Qian and Rongchao Jin Department of Chemistry, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, United States

bS Supporting Information ABSTRACT: While recent advances in the synthesis and crystallography of gold thiolate nanoclusters have led to enormous progress in understanding the structure and bonding of gold thiolate nanomaterials, the changes in structure experienced by these nanomaterials in different conditions, such as low temperature and solvation, is still largely lacking. Herein, we report a temperature- and solvation-dependent extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) study of thiolate-protected Au25 nanoclusters. The structural changes experienced by Au25 in response to low temperature and different solvation environments are illustrated in great detail using a site-specific EXAFS fitting approach consisting of one Au S and three Au Au shells. EXAFS simulations as well as ab initio calculations of the local density of states are used to support the EXAFS analysis and correlate the structural characteristics of Au25 with its electronic properties. These experimental and theoretical studies point out the existence of the interplay between the “metallic” behavior of the Au13 core and the “molecular” behavior of the six RS Au S(R) Au SR “staple” units within Au25, which may shed light on its catalytic mechanism and aid in the design and synthesis of other gold thiolate nanoclusters by balancing the metallic and molecular interactions.

1. INTRODUCTION Understanding the atomic structure of gold thiolate nanoparticles represents an important area of research for both fundamental studies and technological applications of nanomaterials.1,2 Recent advances in the synthesis and crystallization of ultrasmall (