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Electrical Resistance in a Composite of Ultra-Small Silver Nanoparticles Embedded in Gold Nanostructures: Implications for Interface-Enabled Functionality

Maji, TK and Kumbhakar, S and Tongbram, B and Sai, TP and Islam, S and Mahapatra, PS and Pandey, A and Ghosh, A (2023) Electrical Resistance in a Composite of Ultra-Small Silver Nanoparticles Embedded in Gold Nanostructures: Implications for Interface-Enabled Functionality. In: ACS Applied Electronic Materials .

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsaelm.3c00379

Abstract

Ultrasmall nanoparticles of noble metals, in particular silver (Ag) or gold (Au), have been extensively investigated for their optical, magnetic, chemical, and physical properties, but assembling such structures in an electrically conducting metallic matrix, where the physical dimension of individual nanoparticles plays a decisive role, has remained elusive. This is because true metallic conduction through individual or clusters of metallic nanoparticles is often prevented by tunnel barriers due to surface-protecting ligands, oxidation, etc. By removing the chemical remnants, these challenges have been overcome in a cross-linked nanohybrid assembly made of ultrasmall silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) in an all-metallic matrix of Au. The resulting Ag-Au nanohybrid exhibits metallic behavior where the resistance decreases with decreasing temperature, for all radii (rAg ≫ 1-3 nm) and concentrations of AgNPs (average center-to-center distance between two AgNPs d ≈ 4-6 nm) from room to cryogenic temperatures (≈ 6 K). Strikingly, we observe the electrical resistivity of the hybrid to scale directly with the net surface area of the embedded AgNPs, thereby achieving residual resistivity as high as 40 μΩ.m, which is more than 2 orders of magnitude larger than that of crystalline Au. Our experiment outlines a novel method of designing metals with nanostructured interfaces that can lead to new phenomena and functionality.

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: ACS Applied Electronic Materials
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Additional Information: The copyright for this article belongs to American Chemical Society
Keywords: colloidal synthesis; electrical transport; interface scattering; nanoparticles
Department/Centre: Division of Chemical Sciences > Solid State & Structural Chemistry Unit
Division of Physical & Mathematical Sciences > Physics
Date Deposited: 15 Jun 2023 10:32
Last Modified: 15 Jun 2023 10:32
URI: https://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/82064

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