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Dive into the research topics where Gastón Corthey is active.

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Accounts of Chemical Research | 2012

The Chemistry of the Sulfur–Gold Interface: In Search of a Unified Model

Evangelina Pensa; Emiliano Cortés; Gastón Corthey; Pilar Carro; Carolina Vericat; Mariano H. Fonticelli; Guillermo Benítez; Aldo A. Rubert; R. C. Salvarezza

Over the last three decades, self-assembled molecular films on solid surfaces have attracted widespread interest as an intellectual and technological challenge to chemists, physicists, materials scientists, and biologists. A variety of technological applications of nanotechnology rely on the possibility of controlling topological, chemical, and functional features at the molecular level. Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) composed of chemisorbed species represent fundamental building blocks for creating complex structures by a bottom-up approach. These materials take advantage of the flexibility of organic and supramolecular chemistry to generate synthetic surfaces with well-defined chemical and physical properties. These films already serve as structural or functional parts of sensors, biosensors, drug-delivery systems, molecular electronic devices, protecting capping for nanostructures, and coatings for corrosion protection and tribological applications. Thiol SAMs on gold are the most popular molecular films because the resulting oxide-free, clean, flat surfaces can be easily modified both in the gas phase and in liquid media under ambient conditions. In particular, researchers have extensively studied SAMs on Au(111) because they serve as model systems to understand the basic aspects of the self-assembly of organic molecules on well-defined metal surfaces. Also, great interest has arisen in the surface structure of thiol-capped gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) because of simple synthesis methods that produce highly monodisperse particles with controllable size and a high surface/volume ratio. These features make AuNPs very attractive for technological applications in fields ranging from medicine to heterogeneous catalysis. In many applications, the structure and chemistry of the sulfur-gold interface become crucial since they control the system properties. Therefore, many researchers have focused on understanding of the nature of this interface on both planar and nanoparticle thiol-covered surfaces. However, despite the considerable theoretical and experimental efforts made using various sophisticated techniques, the structure and chemical composition of the sulfur-gold interface at the atomic level remains elusive. In particular, the search for a unified model of the chemistry of the S-Au interface illustrates the difficulty of determining the surface chemistry at the nanoscale. This Account provides a state-of-the-art analysis of this problem and raises some questions that deserve further investigation.


RSC Advances | 2014

Self-assembled monolayers of thiolates on metals: a review article on sulfur-metal chemistry and surface structures

Carolina Vericat; M. E. Vela; Gastón Corthey; Evangelina Pensa; Emiliano Cortés; Mariano H. Fonticelli; Francisco J. Ibañez; Guillermo Benítez; Pilar Carro; R. C. Salvarezza

A review article on fundamental aspects of thiolate self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on the (111) and (100) surfaces of the Cu and Ni groups is presented. In particular this work is focused on two important points that remain poorly understood in most of these metals: the chemistry of the S-metal interface, which strongly depends on the nature of the metallic surface, and the role of the interaction forces that not only guide the self-assembly process but also influence the surface structure of SAMs. In addition to recent experimental and theoretical data on these issues we present new density functional calculations including van der Waals forces for an important number of known thiolate surface structures as a function of the hydrocarbon chain length.


ACS Nano | 2010

Synthesis and characterization of gold at gold(i)-thiomalate core at shell nanoparticles.

Gastón Corthey; Lisandro J. Giovanetti; José M. Ramallo-López; Eugenia Zelaya; Aldo A. Rubert; Guillermo Benítez; Félix G. Requejo; Mariano H. Fonticelli; R. C. Salvarezza

In this paper, the synthesis of gold at gold(I)-thiolate core at shell nanoparticles is described for the first time. The chemical nature and structure of these nanoparticles were characterized by a multi-technique approach. The prepared particles consist of gold metallic cores, about 1 nm in size, surrounded by stable gold(I)-thiomalate shells (Au at Au(I)-TM). These nanoparticles could be useful in medicine due to the interesting properties that gold(I)-thiomalate has against rheumatoid arthritis. Furthermore, the described results give new insights in the synthesis and characterization of metallic and core at shell nanoparticles.


Langmuir | 2010

The complex thiol-palladium interface: a theoretical and experimental study.

Pilar Carro; Gastón Corthey; Aldo A. Rubert; Guillermo Benítez; Mariano H. Fonticelli; R. C. Salvarezza

This paper presents a theoretical study of the surface structures and thermodynamic stability of different thiol and sulfide structures present on the palladium surface as a function of the chemical potential of the thiol species. It has been found that as the chemical potential of the thiol is increased, the initially clean palladium surface is covered by a (√3 × √3)R30° sulfur lattice. Further increase in the thiol pressure or concentration leads to the formation of a denser (√7 × √7)R19.1° sulfur lattice, which finally undergoes a phase transition to form a complex (√7 × √7)R19.1° sulfur + thiol adlayer (3/7 sulfur + 2/7 thiol coverage). This transition is accompanied by a strong reconstruction of the Pd(111) surface. The formation of these surface structures has been explained in terms of the catalytic properties of the palladium surface. These results have been compared with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy results obtained for thiols adsorbed on different palladium surfaces.


Langmuir | 2014

Surface chemistry of thiomalic acid adsorption on planar gold and gold nanoparticles.

Julio C. Azcárate; María Alejandra Floridia Addato; Aldo A. Rubert; Gastón Corthey; Germán S. Kürten Moreno; Guillermo Benítez; Eugenia Zelaya; R. C. Salvarezza; Mariano H. Fonticelli

The self-assembly of thiomalic acid (TMA) on Au(111) and on preformed Au nanoparticles (AuNPs) protected by weak ligands has been studied by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and electrochemical techniques. Results show that TMA is adsorbed on the Au(111) surface as thiolate species with a small amount of atomic sulfur (∼10%) and a surface coverage lower than that found for alkanethiols due to steric factors. The amount of atomic sulfur markedly increases when the TMA is adsorbed on AuNPs by the ligand exchange method. We propose that the atomic sulfur is produced as a consequence of C-S bond cleavage, a process that is more favorable at defective sites of the AuNPs surface. The bond scission is also assisted by the presence of the electron-withdrawing carboxy moiety in the α-position relative to the C-S bond. Moreover, the high local concentration of positively charged species increases the stability of the negatively charged leaving group, leading to a higher amount of coadsorbed atomic sulfur. Our results demonstrate that the terminal functionalities of thiols are conditioning factors in the final structure and composition of the adlayers.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

Understanding the surface chemistry of thiolate-protected metallic nanoparticles

Julio C. Azcárate; Gastón Corthey; Evangelina Pensa; Carolina Vericat; Mariano H. Fonticelli; R. C. Salvarezza; Pilar Carro


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

New insights into the chemistry of thiolate-protected palladium nanoparticles

Gastón Corthey; Aldo A. Rubert; A. Lorena Picone; Gilberto Casillas; Lisandro J. Giovanetti; José M. Ramallo-López; Eugenia Zelaya; Guillermo Benítez; Félix G. Requejo; Miguel Jose-Yacaman; R. C. Salvarezza; Mariano H. Fonticelli


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2009

Electrochemical and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy Characterization of Alkanethiols Adsorbed on Palladium Surfaces

Gastón Corthey; Aldo A. Rubert; Guillermo Benítez; Mariano H. Fonticelli; R. C. Salvarezza


Nanoscale | 2011

“Naked” gold nanoparticles supported on HOPG: melanin functionalization and catalytic activity

A. González Orive; Doris Grumelli; Carolina Vericat; José M. Ramallo-López; Lisandro J. Giovanetti; Guillermo Benítez; Julio C. Azcárate; Gastón Corthey; Mariano H. Fonticelli; Félix G. Requejo; A. Hernández Creus; R. C. Salvarezza


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2007

Preparation of Ultrathin Thiolate-Covered Bimetallic Systems: From Extended Planar to Nanoparticle Surfaces

Mariano H. Fonticelli; Gastón Corthey; Guillermo Benítez; R. C. Salvarezza; Lisandro J. Giovanetti; Félix G. Requejo; Young S. Shon

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Mariano H. Fonticelli

National University of La Plata

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R. C. Salvarezza

National University of La Plata

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Guillermo Benítez

National University of La Plata

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Aldo A. Rubert

National University of La Plata

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Carolina Vericat

National University of La Plata

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Félix G. Requejo

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Julio C. Azcárate

National University of La Plata

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Lisandro J. Giovanetti

National University of La Plata

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Pilar Carro

University of La Laguna

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Eugenia Zelaya

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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