Ultrafast fabrication of thermally stable protein-coated silver iodide nanoparticles for solid-state superionic conductors

Publication date: Available online 21 December 2018Source: Colloids and Surfaces B: BiointerfacesAuthor(s): Aryane Tofanello, Juscemácia N. Araujo, Iseli L. Nantes-Cardoso, Fabio F. Ferreira, José A. Souza, Dae-Woon Lim, Hiroshi Kitagawa, Wanius GarciaAbstractSolid-state ionic conductor is an essential and critical part of electrochemical devices such as batteries and sensors. Nano-sized silver iodide (AgI) is the most promising ionic conductor due to its superionic conductivity at room temperature. In recent years, proteins have been used as organic templates to obtain high-performance solid-state ionic conductors as well as to extend their applications in a biosensor. Here, we report the unprecedented ultrafast synthesis of thermally stable protein-coated AgI nanoparticles (NPs) through the photo-irradiation method for solid-state electrolyte. The synthesis was performed using a hyperthermostable bacterial β-glucosidase. The protein-coated AgI NPs with an approximate diameter of 13 nm showed that the controllable transition from the α- to β-/γ-phase was drastically suppressed down to 41 °C in the cooling process. After drying, the product represents a thermally stable organic-inorganic hybrid system with superionic conductivity. It is noteworthy that the superionic conductivity (σ ~ 0.14 S/cm at 170 °C) of thermally stable protein-coated AgI NPs is maintained during several thermal cycles (25―170 °C). To our knowledge, this is the first report showing th...
Source: Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces - Category: Biochemistry Source Type: research