Understanding thiol-induced etching of luminescent gold nanoclusters†
Abstract
This study reported that lysozyme Type VI (Lys VI)-stabilized Au8 clusters serve as a model to probe how distinct types of alkanethiol ligands affect the core etching of AuNCs. By monitoring the fluorescence of Au8 clusters, we determined that thioglycolic acid (TGA)-induced core etching of Au8 clusters was substantially faster at pH 9.0 than it was at pH 3.0. This can be attributed to more efficient electron injection from TGA to Au8 clusters at pH 9.0, facilitating the core etching of Au8 clusters. Because long-chain mercaptoalkanoic acids attached to Au8 clusters are considerably disordered and exhibit a high density of gauche defects, the ability of mercaptoalkanoic acid to etch Au8 clusters increased when the alkyl chain length was decreased. The thiol analogs exhibited the following trend in the core etching of Au8 clusters at pH 9.0: TGA > 2-mercaptoethanol > 1-octanethiol. These results indicate that the carboxyl group of ligand is a key element for the core etching of Au8 clusters. We also disclosed that Au8 clusters can protect Lys VI activity against denaturation and act as a fluorescent probe to detect thimerosal in vaccines.