Crosslinking 2D gold nanoparticle assembly at the air-water interface
ORAL
Abstract
We report the results of crosslinking of two-dimensional gold nanoparticle (Au-NP) assemblies at the air-water interface in situ. We introduce an aqueous soluble ruthenium benzylidene catalyst into the water subphase to generate a robust, elastic two-dimensional network of nanoparticles containing cyclic olefins in their ligand framework. The most striking feature of the crosslinked Au-NP assemblies is that the extended connectivity of the nanoparticles enables the film to preserve much of its integrity under compression and expansion, features that are absent in its non-crosslinked counterparts. The crosslinking process appears to “stitch” the nanoparticle crystalline domains together, allowing the crosslinked monolayers to behave like a piece of fabric under lateral compression.
*This work was supported by The University of Chicago MRSEC under grant no. NSF DMR-1420709, the UMass Amherst MRSEC DMR-0820506, and the Materials Research Facility Network (MRFN). K.Y.C.L. acknowledges the support from the NSF through grant MCB-1413613. All X-ray measurements were carried out at NSF's ChemMatCARS 15-ID-C, which is supported by the NSF through grant NSF/CHE-1346572.
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Presenters
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Binhua Lin
- University of Chicago