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The effects of time and temperature on the gold nanoparticle sizes obtained by digestive ripening have been investigated. In digestive ripening, a polydisperse colloid, upon refluxing with a surface-active ligand in a solvent, gets converted to a nearly monodisperse one. In this study, a polydisperse gold nanoparticle system was heated in 4-tert-butyltoluene with hexadecanethiol at different temperatures, viz., 60, 90, 120, 150, and 180 °C for different time periods, and the trends in particle size variations were recorded. At lower temperatures such as 60 and 90 °C, after the initial narrowing of the size distribution, the particle sizes remain constant even though the refluxing step is continued for 24 h, substantiating the prevalence of the digestive ripening process. However, at elevated temperatures (120, 150, and 180 °C) particle sizes grow continuously, indicating a deviation from the digestive ripening behavior to an Ostwald ripening-type phenomenon.
Sahu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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