Prescribed Self-Assembly of Nanoscale Architectures
· Invited
Abstract
The formation of nanoscale structures by means of self-assembly relies on the interplay of interactions, entropic effects and kinetic factors. The resulting phase behavior can be often rationalized and even manipulated, however, a deliberate fabrication of designed targeted structures via self-assembling is challenging. An incorporation of DNA molecules into a nano-object allows establishing highly selective and programmable, yet local, interactions between the components of nano-systems. That, however, might not be sufficient for self-assembly of specifically targeted structures. Is it possible to use a molecular addressability to prescribe a structural organization of the entire system at the multiple length scales? We have explored several strategies for creating targeted nano-architectures, including three-dimensional lattices of various prescribed symmetries, two-dimensional periodic arrays and arbitrarily designed clusters from the multiple types of the nano-components. The developed approaches also allow for controlling dynamic behavior of assemblies, for example, a selective triggering system transformations and cascade events. Application of these self-assembly methods for novel optical and mechanical nanomaterials will be also discussed.
*O.G. has been supported by the US DOE, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Grant DE-SC0008772. The research conducted at the Center for Functional Nanomaterials, a US DOE Office of Science Facility, is operated at Brookhaven National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-SC0012704.
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Presenters
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Oleg Gang
- Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics, and Department of Chemical Engineering, Columbia University
- Brookhaven National Laboratory
- Chemical Engineering, Columbia University