Plasma Synthesis of Silver Nanoparticles in Imidazolium-Based Ionic Liquids

POSTER

Abstract

Ionic liquids, due to their low vapor pressure and high conductivity, can be combined with low-pressure plasmas to produce metal nanoparticles by reducing dissolved metal salts with the reactive plasma species. In this work, we synthesized 50-nm silver nanoparticles by exposing a solution of AgBF4, dissolved in the ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate (BMIM-BF4), to a DC plasma source. The resulting nanoparticles were extracted and imaged using a field emission scanning electron microscope. Previous studies using ionic liquid electrodes have demonstrated enhanced ionization in the plasma and higher discharge currents compared to metal electrodes. This effect has been attributed to the high secondary electron emission (SEE) yield of ionic liquids. In our study, we measured the SEE yields of three different ionic liquids by bombarding them with electrons and recording the resulting currents. The maximum SEE yield was approximately 2. To better understand this behavior, we conducted molecular orbital calculations, identifying the likely electron donors within each ionic liquid.

*This work was supported by the Princeton Collaborative Research Facility and by the U.S. Department of Energy Contract Nos. DE-AC02-09CH11466, DE-SC0024655, and DE-SC0024656. The authors also acknowledge use of the ELSA high performance computing cluster at TCNJ for the computational work. This cluster is funded in part by NSF Grant Nos. OAC-1826915 and OAC-2320244.

Publication: "Secondary Electron Emission Measurements from Imidazolium-Based Ionic Liquids," submitted 2024.

Presenters

  • Jon Spricigo

    • The College of New Jersey

Authors

  • Jon Spricigo

    • The College of New Jersey
  • Emily Harms

    • The College of New Jersey
  • Angela N Enriquez

    • The College of New Jersey
  • Anna Cook

    • The College of New Jersey
  • Angela M Capece

    • The College of New Jersey