Amala Dass
University of Mississippi
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Featured researches published by Amala Dass.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Michael W. Heaven; Amala Dass; Peter S. White; Kennedy M. Holt; Royce W. Murray
We report the crystal structure of the thiolate gold nanoparticle [TOA+][Au25(SCH2CH2Ph)18-], where TOA+ = N(C8H17)4+. The crystal structure reveals three types of gold atoms: (a) one central gold atom whose coordination number is 12 (12 bonds to gold atoms); (b) 12 gold atoms that form the vertices of an icosahedron around the central atom, whose coordination number is 6 (five bonds to gold atoms and one to a sulfur atom), and (c) 12 gold atoms that are stellated on 12 of the 20 faces of the Au13 icosahedron. The arrangement of the latter gold atoms may be influenced by aurophilic bonding. Together they form six orthogonal semirings, or staples, of -Au2(SCH2CH2Ph)3- in an octahedral arrangement around the Au13 core.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Amala Dass; Anthony Stevenson; George R. Dubay; Joseph B. Tracy; Royce W. Murray
Intact molecular ions of the organothiolate-protected nanoparticle Au25(SCH2CH2Ph)18, including their isotopic resolution, can be observed at 7391 Da as 1- and 1+ ions in negative and positive mode, respectively, by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry when using a tactic of threshold laser pulse intensities and trans-2-[3-(4-tert-butylphenyl)-2-methyl-2-propenylidene]malononitrile (DCTB) as matrix. Previous MALDI-TOF studies of Au nanoparticles using other matrices have encountered extensive fragmentation of nanoparticle as well as thiolate ligands. Absence of fragmentation enables precise determination of the distribution of mixed monolayer compositions on nanoparticles prepared by ligand exchange reactions and by synthesis using thiol mixtures. Reaction conditions producing mixed monolayers containing only one or a small number of usefully functional ligands can be readily identified. At increased laser pulse intensity, the first fragmentation step(s) for the Au25(SCH 2CH2Ph)18 nanoparticle results in losses of AuL units and, in particular, loss of Au4(SCH2CH2Ph)4.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Asantha C. Dharmaratne; Thomas Krick; Amala Dass
We show that MALDI mass spectrometry, suitable for mixtures, is an indispensable tool in probing the mechanism of nanocluster synthesis enabling positive identification of nanoclusters. The size evolution of the mixture of larger clusters (Au(102), Au(68), Au(38)) to form highly monodisperse Au(25) nanoclusters is demonstrated and probably includes the participation of Au(I) thiolate. The size evolution via structural reconstruction of the larger cores such as 38, approximately 44, 68, and 102 to a Au(25) nanocluster has been discussed.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Praneeth Reddy Nimmala; Amala Dass
A new core size protected completely by an aromatic thiol, Au(36)(SPh)(23), is synthesized and characterized by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and UV-visible spectroscopy. The synthesis involving core size changes is studied by MS, and the complete ligand coverage by aromatic thiol group is shown by NMR.
Langmuir | 2009
Christina A. Fields-Zinna; Matthew C. Crowe; Amala Dass; Joshua E. F. Weaver; Royce W. Murray
Monolayer-protected clusters were prepared by procedures like those yielding Au25L18 (where L=-SCH2CH2Ph=-SC2Ph) but using, instead, mixtures of Au and Pd salts, as starting materials, with the intent of creating and characterizing Au25-xMxL18 clusters. Isolation of small nanoparticle product followed by partial ligand exchange to introduce thiolated poly(ethylene glycol) (SPEG=-S(CH2CH2O)5CH3) into the nanoparticle ligand shell enabled characterization of the Au25-xMxL18 content by positive mode electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). For synthetic feed mole ratios of Au:Pd of 9:1 and 13:12, electrospray spectra of the PEGylated MPCs showed that the reaction and isolation produce a mixture of Au25(SC2Ph)18 and a mono-Pd nanoparticle Au24Pd(SC2Ph)18. A higher proportion of the mono-Pd nanoparticle is produced by the 13:12 mole ratio, and also when the thiol:metal ratio was lowered, according to ESI-MS and MALDI-TOF-MS. As the nanoparticle mixture is enriched, by solvent fractionations, in Au24Pd(SC2Ph)18 relative to Au25(SC2Ph)18, the distinctive optical and electrochemical signatures of Au25(SC2Ph)18 are replaced by Au24Pd(SC2Ph)18 nanoparticle responses, which are very different, even though only one Au atom is replaced by a Pd atom.
Analytical Chemistry | 2011
Stefan Knoppe; Julien Boudon; Igor Dolamic; Amala Dass; Thomas Bürgi
Size exclusion chromatography (SEC) on a semipreparative scale (10 mg and more) was used to size-select ultrasmall gold nanoclusters (<2 nm) from polydisperse mixtures. In particular, the ubiquitous byproducts of the etching process toward Au(38)(SR)(24) (SR, thiolate) clusters were separated and gained in high monodispersity (based on mass spectrometry). The isolated fractions were characterized by UV-vis spectroscopy, MALDI mass spectrometry, HPLC, and electron microscopy. Most notably, the separation of Au(38)(SR)(24) and Au(40)(SR)(24) clusters is demonstrated.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014
Chanaka Kumara; Christine M. Aikens; Amala Dass
The atomic arrangement of Au and Ag atoms in Au25-xAgx(SR)18 was determined by X-ray crystallography. Ag atoms were selectively incorporated in the 12 vertices of the icosahedral core. The central atom and the metal atoms in the six [-SR-Au-SR-Au-SR-] units were exclusively gold, with 100% Au occupancy. The composition of the crystals determined by X-ray crystallography was Au18.3Ag6.7(SCH2CH2Ph)18. This composition is in reasonable agreement with the composition Au18.8Ag6.2(SCH2CH2Ph)18 measured by electrospray mass spectrometry. The structure can be described in terms of shells as [email protected]@6×[-SR-Au-SR-Au-SR-]. Density functional theory calculations show that the electronic structure and optical absorption spectra are sensitive to the silver atom arrangement within the nanocluster.
Nanoscale | 2012
Kellen M. Harkness; Yun Tang; Amala Dass; Jun Pan; Nuwan Kothalawala; Vijay J. Reddy; David E. Cliffel; Borries Demeler; Francesco Stellacci; Osman M. Bakr; John A. McLean
Intensely and broadly absorbing nanoparticles (IBANs) of silver protected by arylthiolates were recently synthesized and showed unique optical properties, yet question of their dispersity and their molecular formulas remained. Here IBANs are identified as a superatom complex with a molecular formula of Ag(44)(SR)(30)(4-) and an electron count of 18. This molecular character is shared by IBANs protected by 4-fluorothiophenol or 2-naphthalenethiol. The molecular formula and purity is determined by mass spectrometry and confirmed by sedimentation velocity-analytical ultracentrifugation. The data also give preliminary indications of a unique structure and environment for Ag(44)(SR)(30)(4-).
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013
Praneeth Reddy Nimmala; Bokwon Yoon; Robert L. Whetten; Uzi Landman; Amala Dass
The preparation of gold nanomolecules with sizes other than Au(25)(SR)(18), Au(38)(SR)(24), Au(102)(SR)(44), and Au(144)(SR)(60) has been hampered by stability issues and low yields. Here we report a procedure to prepare Au(67)(SR)(35), for either R = -SCH(2)CH(2)Ph or -SC(6)H(13), allowing high-yield isolation (34%, ~10-mg quantities) of the title compound. Product high purity is assessed at each synthesis stage by rapid MALDI-TOF mass-spectrometry (MS), and high-resolution electrospray-ionization MS confirms the Au(67)(SR)(35) composition. Electronic properties were explored using optical absorption spectroscopy (UV-visible-NIR regions) and electrochemistry (0.74 V spacing in differential-pulsed-voltammetry), modes of ligand binding were studied by NMR spectroscopy ((13)C and (1)H), and structural characteristics of the metal atom core were determined by powder X-ray measurements. Models featuring a Au(17) truncated-decahedral inner core encapsulated by the 30 anchoring atoms of 15 staple-motif units have been investigated with first-principles electronic structure calculations. This resulted in identification of a structure consistent with the experiments, particularly, the opening of a large gap (~0.75 eV) in the (2-) charge-state of the nanomolecule. The electronic structure is analyzed within the framework of a superatom shell model. Structurally, the Au(67)(SR)(35) nanomolecule is the smallest to adopt the complete truncated-decahedral motif for its core with a surface structure bearing greater similarity to the larger nanoparticles. Its electronic HOMO-LUMO gap (~0.75 eV) is nearly double that of the larger Au(102) compound and it is much smaller than that of the Au(38) one. The intermediary status of the Au(67)(SR)(35) nanomolecule is also reflected in both its optical and electrochemical characteristics.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Amala Dass
Information on the emergence of the characteristic plasmonic optical properties of nanoscale noble-metal particles has been limited, due in part to the problem of preparing homogeneous material for ensemble measurements. Here, we report the identification, isolation, and mass spectrometric and optical characterization of a 76.3 kDa thiolate-protected gold nanoparticle. This giant molecule is far larger than any metal-cluster compound, those with direct metal-to-metal bonding, previously known as homogeneous molecular substances, and is the first to exhibit clear plasmonic properties. The observed plasmon emergence phenomena in nanomolecules are of great interest, and the availability of absolutely homogeneous and characterized samples is thus critical to establishing their origin.