Issue 40, 2013

Activated pathways for the directed insertion of patterned nanoparticles into polymer membranes

Abstract

We combine the string method with self-consistent field theory to compute the most probable transition pathway, i.e. the minimum free energy path, for the insertion of Janus and protein-like nanoparticles into a polymer membrane bilayer. The method makes no assumptions in the reaction coordinate and overcomes the long timescales challenge associated with simulating rare events. Our study suggests that one approach to building functional polymernanoparticle composite membranes with oriented nanoparticles is through electrostatic interactions. In particular, hydrophobic Janus nanoparticles with an asymmetric charge distribution can be made to directionally insert into charged membranes. This process is kinetically driven, and involves overcoming a thermally surmountable activation barrier, which requires favorable interactions between the nanoparticle and the hydrophilic block of the membrane. In contrast, the insertion of protein-like nanoparticles with alternating hydrophilic–hydrophobic–hydrophilic domains into polymer membranes does not occur as a thermally activated event.

Graphical abstract: Activated pathways for the directed insertion of patterned nanoparticles into polymer membranes

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Jun 2013
Accepted
29 Aug 2013
First published
30 Aug 2013

Soft Matter, 2013,9, 9615-9623

Activated pathways for the directed insertion of patterned nanoparticles into polymer membranes

C. L. Ting and A. L. Frischknecht, Soft Matter, 2013, 9, 9615 DOI: 10.1039/C3SM51734A

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