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      The polyol process: a unique method for easy access to metal nanoparticles with tailored sizes, shapes and compositions

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          Abstract

          This review aims to give a comprehensive account of the strategies used to prepare mono metallic nanoparticles and multimetallic materials in liquid polyols and to exemplify the potential of this method.

          Abstract

          After about three decades of development, the polyol process is now widely recognized and practised as a unique soft chemical method for the preparation of a large variety of nanoparticles which can be used in important technological fields. It offers many advantages: low cost, ease of use and, very importantly, already proven scalability for industrial applications. Among the different classes of inorganic nanoparticles which can be prepared in liquid polyols, metals were the first reported. This review aims to give a comprehensive account of the strategies used to prepare monometallic nanoparticles and multimetallic materials with tailored size and shape. As regards monometallic materials, while the preparation of noble as well as ferromagnetic metals is now clearly established, the scope of the polyol process has been extended to the preparation of more electropositive metals, such as post-transition metals and semi-metals. The potential of this method is also clearly displayed for the preparation of alloys, intermetallics and core–shell nanostructures with a very large diversity of compositions and architectures.

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          Solvatochromic Dyes as Solvent Polarity Indicators

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            Recent advances in the liquid-phase syntheses of inorganic nanoparticles.

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              Synthesis of monodisperse spherical nanocrystals.

              Much progress has been made over the past ten years on the synthesis of monodisperse spherical nanocrystals. Mechanistic studies have shown that monodisperse nanocrystals are produced when the burst of nucleation that enables separation of the nucleation and growth processes is combined with the subsequent diffusion-controlled growth process through which the crystal size is determined. Several chemical methods have been used to synthesize uniform nanocrystals of metals, metal oxides, and metal chalcogenides. Monodisperse nanocrystals of CdSe, Co, and other materials have been generated in surfactant solution by nucleation induced at high temperature, and subsequent aging and size selection. Monodisperse nanocrystals of many metals and metal oxides, including magnetic ferrites, have been synthesized directly by thermal decomposition of metal-surfactant complexes prepared from the metal precursors and surfactants. Nonhydrolytic sol-gel reactions have been used to synthesize various transition-metal-oxide nanocrystals. Monodisperse gold nanocrystals have been obtained from polydisperse samples by digestive-ripening processes. Uniform-sized nanocrystals of gold, silver, platinum, and palladium have been synthesized by polyol processes in which metal salts are reduced by alcohols in the presence of appropriate surfactants.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                CSRVBR
                Chemical Society Reviews
                Chem. Soc. Rev.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                0306-0012
                1460-4744
                2018
                2018
                : 47
                : 14
                : 5187-5233
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Université Paris Diderot
                [2 ]Sorbonne Paris Cité
                [3 ]ITODYS
                [4 ]CNRS UMR 7086
                [5 ]75205 Paris Cedex 13
                [6 ]Université de Toulouse
                [7 ]INSA CNRS UPS
                [8 ]UMR 5215 LPCNO
                [9 ]31077 Toulouse Cedex 4
                [10 ]France
                Article
                10.1039/C7CS00777A
                29901663
                84fcdba6-f66a-40c7-a444-d1b4a334b61e
                © 2018

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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