Publications by authors named "Cedric A Cordero-Silis"

Transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are ideal systems for two-dimensional (2D) optoelectronic applications owing to their strong light-matter interaction and various band gap energies. New techniques to modify the crystallographic phase of TMDs have recently been discovered, allowing the creation of lateral heterostructures and the design of all-2D circuitry. Thus, far, the potential benefits of phase-engineered TMD devices for optoelectronic applications are still largely unexplored.

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Cysteine-protected metal nanoparticles (NPs) have shown interesting physicochemical properties of potential utility in biomedical applications and in the understanding of protein folding. Herein, cysteine interaction with gold, silver, and copper NPs is characterized by Raman spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations to elucidate the molecular conformation and adsorption sites for each metal. The experimental analysis of Raman spectra upon adsorption with respect to free cysteine indicates that while the C-S bond and carboxyl group are similarly affected by adsorption on the three metal NPs, the amino group is sterically influenced by the electronegativity of each metal, causing a greater modification in the case of gold NPs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Small nanoparticles of gold, silver, and copper (≈2 nm) were synthesized and stabilized with l- and d-cysteine, exhibiting chiroptical activity in the range of 250-400 nm, which was not present in the bare nanoparticles or ligands alone.
  • Silver-cysteine (Ag-Cys) nanoparticles showed the strongest anisotropy factor, while gold-cysteine (Au-Cys) exhibited optical properties slightly shifted toward the visible spectrum.
  • Copper-cysteine (Cu-Cys) nanoparticles displayed multiple circular dichroism (CD) bands that were weaker in intensity compared to those of gold and silver, with the differences in their spectral behavior attributed to the interactions at the metal-ligand interface, as
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