Platinum ion uptake by dendrimers: an NMR and AFM study

Inorg Chem. 2004 Feb 23;43(4):1421-8. doi: 10.1021/ic035127e.

Abstract

The reaction of generation 2 and generation 4 poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers with K2PtCl2 was studied by several NMR methods. The time dependency of the Pt(II) complexation was followed with 195Pt NMR for both dendrimers and the equilibrium product was further characterized with (1)H NMR, and indirectly detected 13C NMR, in the case of the generation 2 dendrimer. After 2 days, a black precipitate of Pt(0) was observed, half the original 195Pt signal was lost, and approximately 20% of the initial Pt(II) was coordinated to the tertiary and secondary nitrogens of the generation 2 dendrimer. The uptake of Pt(II) by the generation 4 dendrimer was much slower, consistent with the steric crowding of the surface groups on the generation 4 dendrimer compared to the more open generation 2. After 10 days, 80% of the Pt(II) was deep within the generation 4 dendrimer; the remaining 20% was unreacted or bound near the surface nitrogens of a single dendrimer. The location and time course of the platinum ion uptake by the dendrimers provides valuable insight into the formation of Pt(0) nanoparticles made in the presence of dendrimers as stabilizers, visualized by atomic force microscopy.