Nanomaterials (Feb 2023)

Silver Nanoshells with Optimized Infrared Optical Response: Synthesis for Thin-Shell Formation, and Optical/Thermal Properties after Embedding in Polymeric Films

  • Laurent Lermusiaux,
  • Lucien Roach,
  • Moncef Lehtihet,
  • Marie Plissonneau,
  • Laure Bertry,
  • Valérie Buissette,
  • Thierry Le Mercier,
  • Etienne Duguet,
  • Glenna L. Drisko,
  • Jacques Leng,
  • Mona Tréguer-Delapierre

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nano13030614
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. 614

Abstract

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We describe a new approach to making ultrathin Ag nanoshells with a higher level of extinction in the infrared than in the visible. The combination of near-infrared active ultrathin nanoshells with their isotropic optical properties is of interest for energy-saving applications. For such applications, the morphology must be precisely controlled, since the optical response is sensitive to nanometer-scale variations. To achieve this precision, we use a multi-step, reproducible, colloidal chemical synthesis. It includes the reduction of Tollens’ reactant onto Sn2+-sensitized silica particles, followed by silver-nitrate reduction by formaldehyde and ammonia. The smooth shells are about 10 nm thick, on average, and have different morphologies: continuous, percolated, and patchy, depending on the quantity of the silver nitrate used. The shell-formation mechanism, studied by optical spectroscopy and high-resolution microscopy, seems to consist of two steps: the formation of very thin and flat patches, followed by their guided regrowth around the silica particle, which is favored by a high reaction rate. The optical and thermal properties of the core-shell particles, embedded in a transparent poly(vinylpyrrolidone) film on a glass substrate, were also investigated. We found that the Ag-nanoshell films can convert 30% of the power of incident near-infrared light into heat, making them very suitable in window glazing for radiative screening from solar light.

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