Nanoparticle Superlattices with Polymer Ligands

ORAL

Abstract

We provide a study of the assembly of single component nanocrystals (nanoparticles) NCs capped with polystyrene by solvent evaporation. We investigate regimes from the colloidal RG/RC<<1 with R_C (core radius) and RG (ligand gyration radius) to the polymer limit RG/RC>>1. We show that for increasing chain length, there is the emergence of a ``cascade effect'', i.e. an abrupt drop in internal energy with the resulting potential of mean force dominated by configurations wherein the chains bend over the core in order to maximize contacts with the other NC, which accounts for the large magnitude of the many body effects in the superlattice free energy. Interestingly, the Orbifold Topolgical Model (OTM) that successfully characterizes the nanocrystal interaction in the colloidal limit, quantitatively describes the polymer limit as well. Our results establish that bcc is the equilibrium phase. Implications for recent and future experiments are discussed.

*NSF, DMR-CMMT 1606336
U.S. Department of Energy (U.S. DOE), Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering. U.S. DOE by Iowa State University under Contract DE-AC02-07CH11358.
XSEDE grant TG-MCB140071.
NSF of China (21574142, 21790343)

Presenters

  • Alex Travesset

    • Iowa State University
    • Ames Lab
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University
    • Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University and Ames Lab
    • Ames Laboratory, Iowa State University

Authors

  • Alex Travesset

    • Iowa State University
    • Ames Lab
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University
    • Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University and Ames Lab
    • Ames Laboratory, Iowa State University
  • Nathan R Horst

    • Ames Lab
  • Jianshe Xia

    • Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China
  • Hongxia Guo

    • Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China