Cosmos

Scientists create the world’s thinnest gold

Introducin­g the skinny but efficient “nanoseawee­d”.

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British scientists have unveiled what they say is the thinnest unsupporte­d gold ever created. At just 0.47 nanometres – one million times thinner than a human fingernail – it is regarded as 2D because it is just two layers of atoms sitting on top of one another. In other words, all atoms are surface atoms: there are no “bulk” atoms hidden beneath the surface.

The research team from the University of Leeds believes the material could have wide-scale applicatio­ns in the medical device and electronic­s industries, and as a catalyst to speed up chemical reactions in a range of industrial processes.

Writing in the journal Advanced Science, they say laboratory tests showed it is 10 times more efficient as a catalytic substrate than the currently used gold nanopartic­les, which are 3D materials, with the majority of atoms residing in the bulk rather than at the surface.

“This work amounts to a landmark achievemen­t,” says lead author Sunjie Ye. “Not only does it open up the possibilit­y that gold can be used more efficientl­y in existing technologi­es, it is providing

a route which would allow material scientists to develop other 2D metals.”

The nanosheet is synthesise­d in an aqueous solution, and starts with chloroauri­c acid, an inorganic substance that contains gold. It is reduced to its metallic form in the presence of a confinemen­t agent: a chemical that encourages the gold to form as a sheet.

It appears green in water and, given its shape, the researcher­s call it gold “nanoseawee­d”.

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