Issue 7, 2020

Chain-length effect on binary superlattices of polymer-tethered nanoparticles

Abstract

Binary inorganic nanoparticles (NPs) can be assembled into various types of superlattices depending on the size ratio, shape, and interparticle potential, which may tailor the mechanical, optical and electronic properties. Here, polymer-stabilized gold NPs are assembled into binary nanoparticle superlattices (BNSLs) and their structures were precisely controlled by tuning the size ratio of NPs as well as the chain length of polymer ligands. Typically, binary gold NPs with short-chain polymer ligands showed the phase behaviors of hard-sphere colloids. By contrast, ones with long-chain polymer ligands showed the phase behavior of soft-sphere binary colloids. Interestingly, mixed binary NPs with short-chain and long-chain polymer ligands showed unnatural binary NP superlattices in thin films, in which small NPs are contained in octahedral voids of the regular HCP lattice. Our finding can be further extended to other types of functional NPs, which may tune various properties for devices.

Graphical abstract: Chain-length effect on binary superlattices of polymer-tethered nanoparticles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Research Article
Submitted
29 Mar 2020
Accepted
30 Apr 2020
First published
06 May 2020

Mater. Chem. Front., 2020,4, 2089-2095

Chain-length effect on binary superlattices of polymer-tethered nanoparticles

K. Wang, F. Li, S. Jin, K. Wang, D. Tian, M. Hussain, J. Xu, L. Zhang, Y. Liao, E. Lee, G. Yi, X. Xie and J. Zhu, Mater. Chem. Front., 2020, 4, 2089 DOI: 10.1039/D0QM00194E

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