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Dive into the research topics where Nicolas Goubet is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolas Goubet.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Probing atomic ordering and multiple twinning in metal nanocrystals through their vibrations

Hervé Portalès; Nicolas Goubet; Lucien Saviot; S. Adichtchev; Daniel B. Murray; Alain Mermet; E. Duval; Marie-Paule Pileni

Control of nanocrystal (NC) crystallinity currently raises great interest because of its potential benefits in both physics modeling and technological applications. Advances in methods for synthesizing perfect single-crystalline NCs are recent, so that the effect of crystallinity on NC properties has received only limited study and still needs to be properly investigated. Here, we report that crystallinity of gold NCs dramatically modifies their vibrations. Using low-frequency Raman scattering, we clearly demonstrate that single-domain NCs vibrate differently than their multiply twinned counterparts, through the splitting of the quadrupolar vibrations, which is only observed for the former. Using the resonant ultrasound approach, we calculate the vibrational frequencies of a gold sphere and show that elastic anisotropy induces a lift of degeneracy of the quadrupolar mode in good agreement with our experimental measurements. These findings open up challenging perspectives on using Raman spectroscopy to characterize nanocrystallinity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Simultaneous Growths of Gold Colloidal Crystals

Nicolas Goubet; Hervé Portalès; Cong Yan; Imad Arfaoui; Pierre-Antoine Albouy; Alain Mermet; Marie-Paule Pileni

Natural systems give the route to design periodic arrangements with mesoscopic architecture using individual nanocrystals as building blocks forming colloidal crystals or supracrystals. The collective properties of such supracrystals are one of the main driving forces in materials research for the 21st century with potential applications in electronics or biomedical environments. Here we describe two simultaneous supracrystal growth processes from gold nanocrystal suspension, taking place in solution and at the air-liquid interface. Furthermore, the growth processes involve the crystallinity selection of nanocrystals and induce marked changes in the supracrystal mechanical properties.


Nano Letters | 2013

Modulating physical properties of isolated and self-assembled nanocrystals through change in nanocrystallinity.

Nicolas Goubet; Cong Yan; Dario Polli; Hervé Portalès; Imad Arfaoui; Giulio Cerullo; Marie-Paule Pileni

For self-assembled nanocrystals in three-dimensional (3D) superlattices, called supracrystals, the crystalline structure of the metal nanocrystals (either single domain or polycrystalline) or nanocrystallinity is likely to induce significant changes in the physical properties. Previous studies demonstrated that spontaneous nanocrystallinity segregation takes place in colloidal solution upon self-assembling of 5 nm dodecanethiol-passivated Au nanocrystals. This segregation allows the exclusive selection of single domain and polycrystalline nanoparticles and consequently producing supracrystals with these building blocks. Here, we investigate the influence of nanocrystallinity on different properties of nanocrystals with either single domain or polycrystalline structure. In particular, the influence of nanocrystallinity on the localized surface plasmon resonance of individual nanocrystals dispersed in the same dielectric media is reported. Moreover, the frequencies of the radial breathing mode of single domain and polycrystalline nanoparticles are measured. Finally, the orientational ordering of single domain nanocrystals markedly changes the supracrystal elastic moduli compared to supracrystals of polycrystalline nanocrystals.


ACS Nano | 2010

Crystallinity Dependence of the Plasmon Resonant Raman Scattering by Anisotropic Gold Nanocrystals

Hervé Portalès; Nicolas Goubet; Lucien Saviot; Peng Yang; Sergey Sirotkin; E. Duval; Alain Mermet; Marie-Paule Pileni

Au nanocrystals (NCs) with different crystalline structures and related morphologies are unselectively synthesized using an organometallic route. The acoustic vibrations of these NCs are studied by plasmon mediated low-frequency Raman scattering (LFRS). A splitting of the quadrupolar vibration mode is pointed out in the LFRS spectrum. Comparison of the measured frequencies with calculations and careful examination of the NCs morphologies by transmission electron microscopy ascertain this splitting as being an effect of crystallinity. The excitation dependence of the LFRS spectra is interpreted by the shape-selection of the NCs via plasmon-vibration coupling. These results give new insights into the crystallinity influence on both the vibrations of the NCs and their coupling with plasmons and demonstrate the relevance of elastic anisotropy in monodomain NCs.


Nano Letters | 2012

Crystallinity Segregation upon Selective Self-Assembling of Gold Colloidal Single Nanocrystals

Hervé Portalès; Nicolas Goubet; Sergey Sirotkin; E. Duval; Alain Mermet; Pierre-Antoine Albouy; Marie-Paule Pileni

Spontaneous separation of single from polycrystalline 5 nm gold nanocrystals (NCs) is observed in colloidal solution. This segregation takes place upon self-assembling of single crystalline NCs at the air-solvent interface and in precipitated superlattices. Polycrystalline NCs are observed to remain in the suspension. Transmission electron microscopy analysis of the size distribution of NCs issued from the different populations indicates that the NC size does not change from each other, excluding therefore any size segregation in this process. Using both low-frequency Raman scattering and X-ray diffraction provides reliable characterization of nanocrystallinity for each population of NCs, thus confirming the crystallinity segregation. The single crystalline NCs are found by electron diffraction to self-assemble into close-packed superlattices with long-range translational and orientational ordering, while polycrystalline NCs behave like spheres with no preferential orientation. The face-to-face orientational ordering, which is only observed for single crystalline NCs, supports the relevance of the specific crystallinity-related morphologies of these NCs in their better ability to self-assemble. Exploiting this spontaneous segregation would open up a simple alternative to other demanding routes for controlling crystallinity of nanocrystals and optimizing their properties for potential applications.


ACS Nano | 2009

A way to control the gold nanocrystals size: using seeds with different sizes and subjecting them to mild annealing.

Nicolas Goubet; Yong Ding; Mathias Brust; Zhong Lin Wang; Marie-Paule Pileni

We demonstrate that the sequence of reactants plays a key factor in the final size of Au nanocrystals. The growth mechanism markedly differs with seed size and/or internal crystallinity. Conversely to what could be expected when the multiple-twinned particle (MTP) seeds are rather large (3.5 nm) they control the nanocrystal growth. When the single domain seeds are very small (1.5 nm) the majority of nanocrystals produced are large icosahedral (85%) nanoparticles as predicted from a theoretical model.


Langmuir | 2013

Hierarchy in Au Nanocrystal Ordering in a Supracrystal: II. Control of Interparticle Distances

Yanfen Wan; Nicolas Goubet; Pierre-Antoine Albouy; Nicolas Schaeffer; Marie-Paule Pileni

Au nanocrystals coated with thiol derivatives differing by the length of their alkyl chains are used to build 3D superlattices called supracrystals. In this study, we used two sets of Au nanocrystals differing by their sizes and size distributions. The average sizes are 5 nm (Au5) and 7 nm (Au7). From one experiment to the other, the size distribution slightly changes. For Au5 nanocrystals, it evolves from 6 to 8%, and for Au7 nanocrystals, it varies from 5 to 6%. The Au nanocrystals (Au5 and Au7) are first dispersed in toluene and produce fcc supracrystals by solvent evaporation. Here, by small-angle grazing X-ray diffraction, we observe a control in the average interparticle distance within the supracrystals. When the supracrystals are grown at zero toluene vapor pressure, the interparticle distances increase linearly with the alkyl chain length of the nanocrystals coating agent regardless of their diameters. Furthermore, the dry supracrystals can swell and the interparticle distance within the superstructure be increased by subjecting the material to toluene vapor pressure after initial growth. This swelling process is reversible, and retraction occurs when the toluene vapor pressure drops. This indicates a strong ability of the dried supracrystals to trap toluene molecules. On increasing the toluene vapor pressure during the solvent evaporation process, the slope of the linear dependency of the interparticle distances to the alkyl chain length is markedly decreased and the interparticle distance reaches a quasi-plateau. This is explained by the influence of depletion forces created by the presence of thiol-containing molecules physisorbed on the coating molecules on the internal structure of these supracrystals. Recently, we demonstrated that, by using the same nanocrystals (Au5 and Au7), a hierarchy in the supracrystal growth process takes place from heterogeneous nucleation with the formation of a layer-by-layer film to homogeneous nucleation in solution with the formation of shaped supracrystals. Here it is shown that the interparticle distance is independent of the supracrystal growth mechanisms.


Nano Letters | 2012

Unexpected electronic properties of micrometer-thick supracrystals of Au nanocrystals.

Peng Yang; Imad Arfaoui; Tristan Cren; Nicolas Goubet; Marie-Paule Pileni

We investigated the electronic properties of highly ordered three-dimensional colloidal crystals of gold nanocrystals (7 ± 0.4 nm), called supracrystals. Two kinds of Au supracrystals with typical thicknesses of 300 nm and 5 μm, respectively, are probed for the first time with scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy at 5 K revealing similar power law behavior and showing homogeneous conductance with the fingerprint of isolated nanocrystal. Potential applications evading the size-related risks of nanocrystals could be then considered.


Langmuir | 2013

Hierarchy in Au Nanocrystal Ordering in Supracrystals: A Potential Approach to Detect New Physical Properties

Yanfen Wan; Nicolas Goubet; Pierre-Antoine Albouy; M. P. Pileni

Here we describe the morphologies of Au nanocrystals self-assembled in fcc 3D superlattices called supracrystals. The average size of the nanocrystals is either 5 or 7 nm with a very small size distribution (<7%). The coating agents used to stabilize the nanocrystals are dodecanethiol (C12H25-SH), tetradecanethiol (C14H29-SH), and hexadecanethiol (C16H33-SH). The influences of the evaporation time, the volume of the chamber used to evaporate the toluene solvent, and the substrate temperature are studied. For nanocrystals characterized by the same size and coating agent, the supracrystal morphologies markedly change on increasing the evaporation time from 8 to 9 to 25 h whereas a slight change takes place on increasing the chamber volume. The nanocrystals ability to self-order in supracrystals decreases upon increasing the chain length of the coating agent from dodecanethiol (C12) to tetradecanethiol (C14) to hexadecanethiol (C16). Decreasing the evaporation rate (25 h) and/or increasing the substrate temperature (50 °C) improves the nanocrystal ordering in fcc supracrystals. A hierarchy in nanocrystal ordering has the following sequence disordered assemblies, supracrystal film sitting on a disordered nanocrystal film, supracrystal films grown layer-by-layer, and finally supracrystals grown in solution with various well-defined shapes.


Nano Research | 2014

Negative supracrystals inducing a FCC-BCC transition in gold nanocrystal superlattices

Nicolas Goubet; Marie-Paule Pileni

The growth of nanocrystal superlattices of 5 nm single domain Au nanocrystals at an air-toluene interface induces formation of well-defined thin films (300–400 nm) with large coherence lengths. High-resolution electron microscopy showed that polyhedral holes (negative supracrystal) were formed on the nanocrystal superlattice surface. Formation of negative supracrystals is attributed to inclusion in the superlattice of organic molecules (dodecanethiol), which are present in concentrated zones at the air-toluene interface. The coexistence of two supracrystalline structures (bcc/fcc) is attributed to diffusion of dodecanethiol molecules resulting in a Bain deformation of the nanocrystal array.

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Hervé Portalès

Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University

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Peng Yang

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Imad Arfaoui

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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