Nitroxide radicals, adhered to gold nanoparticles, have found
novel applications such as cancer treatment, neuroprotection after cerebral
injury, radiotherapy, and as drug-delivering agents. The details of the nature
of the binding of nitroxide radicals to metallic nanostructures have been a
subject of debate for the last two decades. In this work, microcalorimetric
measurements are complemented with a theoretical study of noncovalent
interactions between different derivatives of the nitroxide radical 2,2,5,5-
tetramethylpiperidinoxyl and an Au8 nanocluster to shed light on the nature
of the binding of the radical molecule and the nanocluster. Experiments and
theory showed that, although the molecule could bind through the nitroxide
group, organic substituents such as amino and carboxyl groups interact much
more favorably with the nanocluster. Attachment of these groups to the gold
nanocluster is the result of an intense polarization of the “nucleophilic” sites
of the metallic cluster, strengthened by van der Waals attraction between the
molecule and the nanocluster.