Systematic Study of Reaction Conditions for Size-Controlled Synthesis of Silica Nanoparticles

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2024 Sep 27;14(19):1561. doi: 10.3390/nano14191561.

Abstract

This study presents a reproducible and scalable method for synthesizing silica nanoparticles (SNPs) with controlled sizes below 200 nm, achieved by systematically varying three key reaction parameters: ammonium hydroxide concentration, water concentration, and temperature. SNPs with high monodispersity and controlled dimensions were produced by optimizing these factors. The results indicated a direct correlation between ammonium hydroxide concentration and particle size, while higher temperatures resulted in smaller particles with increased polydispersity. Water concentration also influenced particle size, with a quadratic relationship observed. This method provides a robust approach for tailoring SNP sizes, with significant implications for biomedical applications, particularly in drug delivery and diagnostics. Using eco-friendly solvents such as ethanol further enhances the sustainability and cost-effectiveness of the process.

Keywords: Stöber method; ammonium hydroxide concentration; nanoparticle synthesis; particle size control; silica nanoparticles; temperature effect; water concentration.

Grants and funding

Some TEM studies were performed using the JEOL-1400 TEM electron microscope funded by the grant GINOP-2.3.3-15-2016-0002 (New generation electron microscope: 3D ultrastructure). The project has been supported by the NKFI, grant 2021_1.2.6_TET_IPARI_MA_2022_00015.