Back to Search Start Over

Controlled hierarchical assembly of gold nanoparticles in macroscopic films: from densely packed monolayers to networks of micropores and nanobundles

Authors :
Al-Amin Dhirani
Minhal Hasham
Cynthia M. Goh
Monique Tie
Yi Lin
Steven Gravelsins
Kevin Yu
Source :
Soft Matter. 13:2437-2447
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2017.

Abstract

The present study demonstrates the ability of excess, weakly amphiphilic n-alkanethiols (n = 4, 12, 18) and solvent composition to tune through a wide range of large-scale, macroscopic architectures formed by alkanethiol-capped Au nanoparticles (NPs). Both the alkanethiols and NPs are significantly hydrophobic species and compete for surface area at an air-water interface. When solutions of the two species are spread on a large (50 cm2) water surface in a Teflon well, a thin film forms and exhibits co-existing macroscopic regions with various distinct NP self-assembled architectures, namely a close packed monolayer, a network phase characterized by micron-sized pores (micropores) surrounded by quasi-linear bundles of nanoparticles, and finally aggregates. We hypothesize that the co-existence of various NP architectures results from fast, non-uniform evaporation across the large water surface. When solutions are instead deposited on a smaller (5 cm2) water surface contained within a Teflon ring to control the water surface curvature and the evaporation rate is slowed, we show for the first time that NPs form macroscopically uniform self-assemblies whose architectures can be tuned from monolayers → monolayers with micropores → extended micropore/NP bundle networks by varying excess alkanethiol concentration and solvent composition. We propose that competition between NPs and excess alkanethiols for water surface area, and alkanethiol self-assembly as well as solvent dewetting play important roles in the formation of the network phase, and discuss a potential mechanism for its formation.

Details

ISSN :
17446848 and 1744683X
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Soft Matter
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5fa051da2b06697ea91b11e620a1a766
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c6sm02586b