Publications by authors named "Jung Hun Koo"

Despite the enormous applications of and fundamental scientific interest in amorphous hollow-silica nanostructures (s), their synthesis in crystal-like nonspherical polygonal architectures is challenging. Herein, we present a facile one-shot synthetic procedure for various unconventional s with controllable surface curvatures (concave, convex, or angular), symmetries (spherical, polygonal, or Janus), and interior architectures (open or closed walls) by the addition of a metal salt and implementing kinetic handles of silica precursor (silanes/ammonia) concentrations and reverse-micellar volume. During the silica growth, we identified the key role of transiently crystallized metal coordination complexes as a nanopolyhedral "ghost template", which provides facet-selective interactions with amino-silica monomers and guides the differential silica growth that produces different s.

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Interest and challenges remain in designing and synthesizing catalysts with nature-like complexity at few-nm scale to harness unprecedented functionalities by using sustainable solar light. We introduce "nanocatalosomes"-a bio-inspired bilayer-vesicular design of nanoreactor with metallic bilayer shell-in-shell structure, having numerous controllable confined cavities within few-nm interlayer space, customizable with different noble metals. The intershell-confined plasmonically coupled hot-nanospaces within the few-nm cavities play a pivotal role in harnessing catalytic effects for various organic transformations, as demonstrated by "acceptorless dehydrogenation", "Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling" and "alkynyl annulation" affording clean conversions and turnover frequencies (TOFs) at least one order of magnitude higher than state-of-the-art Au-nanorod-based plasmonic catalysts.

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Multifunctionalized porous catalytic nanoarchitectures are highly desirable for a variety of chemical transformations; however, selective installation of different catalysts with spatial and functional precision working synergistically and predictably, is highly challenging. Here, a synthetic strategy is developed toward the customizable combination of orthogonally reactive metal nanocrystals within interconnected carbon-cavities as a compartmentalized framework by employing aminated-silica-directed thermal solid-state nanoconfined synthesis of metal nanocrystals and endotemplating concomitant carbonization-mediated interlocking, as key processes. The main advantage of the strategy is the facility to choose any combination of metals, which can be further employed according to the desired application.

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Here, a highly selective solid-state nanocrystal conversion strategy is developed toward concave iron oxide (FeO) nanocube with an open-mouthed cavity engraved exclusively on a single face. The strategy is based on a novel heat-induced nanospace-confined domino-type migration of Fe ions from the SiO-FeO interface toward the surrounding silica shell and concomitant self-limiting nanoscale phase-transition to the Fe-silicate form. Equipped with the chemically unique cavity, the produced Janus-type concave iron oxide nanocube was further functionalized with controllable density of catalytic Pt-nanocrystals exclusively on concave sites and utilized as a highly diffusive catalytic Janus nanoswimmer for the efficient degradation of pollutant-dyes in water.

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A novel reverse microemulsion strategy was developed to asymmetrically encapsulate metal-oxide nanoparticles in silica by exploiting the self-catalytic growth of aminosilane-containing silica at a single surface site. This strategy produced various colloidal Janus nanoparticles, including Au/Fe3O4@asy-SiO2, which were converted to an Au-containing silica nanosphere, Au@con-SiO2, by reductive Fe3O4 dissolution. The use of Au@con-SiO2 as a metal-growing nanoreactor allowed the templated synthesis of various noble-metal nanocrystals, including a hollow dendritic Pt nanoshell which exhibits significantly better electrocatalytic activities for the oxygen reduction reaction than commercial Pt/C catalysts.

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