University of Innsbruck; Kasetsart University; Kasetsart University; Kasetsart University; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC); Hokkaido University
Type
Article
Source Title
NANOSCALE
ISSN
2040-3364
Year
2012
Volume
4
Issue
2
Page
585-590
Open Access
Green Submitted
Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI
10.1039/c1nr11282a
Format
PDF
Abstract
The thermal stabilization of thin gold nanowires with a diameter of about 2 nm by surfactants is investigated by means of classical molecular dynamics simulations. While the well-known melting point depression leads to a much lower melting of gold nanowires compared to bulk gold, coating the nanowires with surfactants can reverse this, given that the attractive interaction between surfactant molecules and gold atoms lies beyond a certain threshold. It is found that the melting process of coated nanowires is dominated by surface instability patterns, whereas the melting behaviour of gold nanowires in a vacuum is dominated by the greater mobility of atoms with lower coordination numbers that are located at edges and corners. The suppression of the melting by surfactants is explained by the isotropic pressure acting on the gold surface (due to the attractive interaction) which successfully suppresses large-amplitude thermal motions of the gold atoms.
Funding Sponsor
Austrian Ministry of Science BMWF; National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA Chair Professor and National Nanotechnology Center); National Research University of Thailand (NRU); Thailand Research Fund