Individual silver nanoparticles observed in real time
https://phys.org/news/2018-07-individual-silver-nanoparticles-real.html
Even under well-defined laboratory conditions, current research has yielded different, sometimes contradictory, results on the reaction of silver nanoparticles. "In every batch of nanoparticles, the individual properties of the particles, such as size and shape, vary," says Kristina Tschulik, a member of the Cluster of Excellence Ruhr Explores Solvation. "With previous procedures, a myriad of particles was generally investigated at the same time, meaning that the effects of these variations could not be recorded. Or the measurements took place in a high vacuum, not under natural conditions in an aqueous solution."
The team led by Kristina Tschulik thus developed a method that enables individual silver particles to be investigated in a natural environment. "Our aim is to be able to record the reactivity of individual particles," explains the researcher. This requires a combination of electrochemical and spectroscopic methods. With optical and hyperspectral dark-field microscopy, , the group was able to observe individual nanoparticles as visible and coloured pixels. Using the change in the colour of the pixels, or more precisely their spectral information, the researchers were able to follow what was happening in an electrochemical experiment in real time.