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In-Situ "Anti-Galvanic Reduction" Propels Atomic-Scale Manufacturing

Feb 06, 2026 | By FANG Liang

Recently, a research team led by Profs. WU Zhikun and ZHUANG Shengli from the Institute of Solid State Physics, Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, in collaboration with Professor LU Zhou from Anhui Normal University, has proposed an instant "anti-galvanic reduction" alloying strategy for the synthesis of large silver nanoclusters.

The results were published in National Science Review.

Metal nanoparticles exist in two forms—molecular nanoclusters and metallic nanocrystals—but determining the critical size at which this transition occurs has long been a challenge. For highly reactive silver clusters in particular, conventional synthesis methods often suffer from poor stability, uneven sizes, and low yields, restricting both basic research and practical use.

In this study, the researchers utilized the unique anti-galvanic reduction behavior of silver nanoclusters to trigger alloying with zinc. Control experiments showed that zinc clusters cannot form on their own and require the presence of silver clusters. This strategy significantly improved cluster stability and made it possible to obtain large quantities of uniform silver-based nanoclusters, marking a substantial advance over previous approaches.

The team further applied a precise "atomic surgery" dealloying technique to selectively remove zinc atoms while preserving the overall structure, successfully producing pure silver nanoclusters. Structural characterization revealed that both the alloyed and pure clusters share a stable, well-defined crystal framework.

Although these nanoclusters display strong absorption features similar to metallic nanoparticles, advanced spectroscopic measurements confirmed that they remain molecular in nature rather than truly metallic. This result highlights that commonly used steady-state absorption spectra may lead to misleading conclusions, while ultrafast techniques provide a more reliable way to judge metallic behavior.

The ability to prepare high-quality nanoclusters in large quantities also allowed the researchers to explore their photothermal properties. The study found that nanoparticles near the critical size exhibit enhanced light absorption and photothermal conversion efficiency compared with both smaller clusters and larger nanocrystals.

"Our work overcomes long-standing challenges in the stable, large-scale preparation of reactive silver nanoclusters," said Prof. WU Zhikun, "It also provides a reliable way to distinguish molecular clusters from metallic nanoparticles and reveals the unique properties of nanoparticles at the critical size, paving the way for future research and applications."

Summary diagram of atomic-scale manufacturing and characterization of Ag-based nanoclusters (Image by FANG Liang)


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