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Synthesis and surface engineering of nanomaterials by atmospheric-pressure microplasmas
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Synthesis and surface engineering of nanomaterials by atmospheric-pressure microplasmas

J. McKenna, J. Patel, Subhabrata Mitra, Navneet Soin, V. Švrček, P. Maguire and D. Mariotti
The European Physical Journal-Applied Physics, Vol.56(24020)
10/2011

Abstract

Physics
Two different atmospheric pressure microplasma systems are discussed and used for the synthesis and surface engineering of a range of nanomaterials. Specifically a gas-phase approach from vaporized tetramethylsilane has been used to synthesize silicon carbide nanoparticles with diameters below 10 nm. A different microplasma system that interfaces with a liquid solution has then been used for the synthesis of surfactant-free electrically stabilized gold nanoparticles with varying size. A similar microplasma-liquid system has been finally successfully used to tailor surface properties of silicon nanoparticles and to reduce graphene oxide into graphene. The synthesis and surface engineering mechanisms are also discussed.
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