Self-assembly and structural relaxation in 'patch-clasping' nanoparticles
ORAL
Abstract
Polymer-grafted ‘patchy’ nanoparticles (NPs) can self-assemble into open network structures, making them great building blocks for tunable metamaterials. However, a fundamental understanding of the underlying driving forces remains elusive. Here, we combine simulation and experiments to study the assembly dynamics of a model system of triangular gold nanoprisms functionalized with polystyrene-polyacrylic acid block copolymers (PS-b-PAA). We show that inter-NP bonds formed between interacting polymeric patches are longitudinally robust and rotationally flexible. Scaling theory reveals that inter-NP bond formation is driven by chain reorganization between interacting patches. This enables the development of a coarse-grained model that reproduces experimental dynamics of network chains formed from multiple NPs. Simulations reveal that the network’s rotational relaxation, and therefore reconfiguration, is influenced by chain architecture and relative bond orientations between NPs. Our results suggest that tuning the relative orientations between patchy nanoparticles during bond formation can provide a powerful handle for controlling the dynamical responses of reconfigurable nanomaterials.
*K.A. and T.V. acknowledge funding support from the Ralph E. Powe Award.
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Publication: Kim, A.; Akkunuri, K.; Qian, C.; Yao, L.; Sun, K.; Chen, Z.; Vo, T.; Chen, Q. Direct Imaging of "Patch-Clasping" and Relaxation in Robust and Flexible Nanoparticle Assemblies. (Submitted to ACS Nano)
Presenters
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Kireeti Akkunuri
- Johns Hopkins University