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Research Article | Open Access

Decoupling nucleation and growth control for size-tunable spherical Ni nanoparticles and their tailored electrical and magnetic properties

Jie Zhu1,3,4,§Wenxin Zhan2,§Dawei Liu2Yongchang Zhang2Mingxiang Huang5Haiyan Zhao4Jianwei Wang1,3( )Yang Wu5 ( )Junfeng Liu2 ( )
GRINM NEXUSX Advanced Materials (Beijing) Co. Ltd., Beijing 101407, China
State Key Laboratory of Chemical Resource Engineering, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, 15 Beisanhuan East Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100029, China
China GRINM Group Co. Ltd., Beijing 100088, China
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
College of Mathematics and Physics, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Beijing 100029, China

§ Jie Zhu and Wenxin Zhan contributed equally to this work.

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Abstract

Miniaturizing electronic components calls for controlled synthesis of conductive metal nanoparticles with tunable and narrow size distributions. This has become increasingly essential, yet a significant challenge for the use as conductive inks or pastes in various applications, including multilayer ceramic capacitors, flexible electronics, and magnetofluids. In this work, we report the controllable synthesis of uniform spherical nickel nanoparticles via a mild aqueous-phase reduction strategy using triethanolamine (TEA) as a modulating agent. Through strategic control of both the dosage and the timing of TEA addition, we successfully decoupled nucleation and growth stages, enabling precise particle size regulation within the 95–270 nm range. Moreover, electrical conductivity tests on both pressed Ni pellets and printed ink lines confirmed the inherited metallic nature. The correlation between particle size and conductivity can be attributed to enhanced interparticle neck formation during sintering, which reduces electrical resistance. Both magnetic saturation (Ms) and remanent magnetization (Mr) are also positively related to particle size, while coercivity (Hc) shows a converse relationship, consistent with a size-dependent transition from surface-disordered to bulk-like multidomain magnetic behavior. This study not only provides an environmentally benign and scalable strategy for size-tunable Ni nanoparticle synthesis but also offers new promises for their integration in next-generation electronic and magnetic devices.

Graphical Abstract

A mild aqueous strategy enables size-tunable spherical Ni nanoparticles (95–270 nm) by decoupling nucleation and growth via triethanolamine (TEA) modulation, leading to tunable electrical and magnetic properties.

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Nano Research
Article number: 94908493

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Cite this article:
Zhu J, Zhan W, Liu D, et al. Decoupling nucleation and growth control for size-tunable spherical Ni nanoparticles and their tailored electrical and magnetic properties. Nano Research, 2026, 19(4): 94908493. https://doi.org/10.26599/NR.2026.94908493
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Received: 27 December 2025
Revised: 22 January 2026
Accepted: 25 January 2026
Published: 10 April 2026
© The Author(s) 2026. Published by Tsinghua University Press.

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).