Buckled Membranes in Mixed-Valence Ionic Amphiphile Vesicles Analyzed by X-Ray Scattering

ORAL

Abstract

We demonstrate that charged amphiphilic molecules, including molecules with biological motifs, organize into non-spherical shapes expected for elastic membranes. Specifically, we demonstrate that anionic (-1) water insoluble amphiphiles and cationic amphiphiles (+3) (which form micelles in water), can co- assemble into small buckled vesicles ( J. Am. Chem. Soc., 131, 2030-12031 (2009) ). The strong electrostatic interaction between the +3 and -1 head groups increases the cohesion energy of the amphiphiles and favors the formation of two-dimensional, flat ionic domains on the vesicle surface, resulting in edges and a buckled shape. WAXS measurements confirm the presence of crystalline domains induced by these ionic correlations.

*Research supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering under Award DOE DE-FG02-08ER46539.

Authors

  • Michael Bedzyk

    • Northwestern University
    • Northwestern University, Argonne National Laboratory
  • Cheuk Leung

    • Northwestern University
  • Megan Greenfield

    • Northwestern University
  • Liam Palmer

    • Northwestern University
  • Graziano Vernizzi

    • Northwestern University
  • Monica Olvera de la Cruz

    • Northwestern University
    • Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
  • Samuel Stupp

    • Northwestern University