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Download fileRole of the Solvent–Surfactant Duality of Ionic Liquids in Directing Two-Dimensional Particle Assembly
journal contribution
posted on 2020-10-22, 14:12 authored by Lili Liu, Duo Song, Biao Jin, Michael A. Sinnwell, Jun Liu, James J. De Yoreo, Maria L. SushkoNanoparticle
self-assembly plays a key role in the formation of
superlattices, which exhibit remarkable physical and chemical properties.
However, controlling the assembly remains a challenge partly due to
a lack of understanding of the assembly dynamics and the difficulty
in linking interfacial solution properties to interparticle forces.
Using liquid-cell transmission electron microscopy, the self-assembly
of gold nanoparticles (NPs) into superlattices in mixtures of water
and ionic liquid (IL) was visualized, revealing a dual role of the
IL in the assembly process. At intermediate concentrations, the IL
acts as a surfactant stabilizing the particles at a well-defined equilibrium
separation corresponding to the length of hydrogen-bonded IL cations
adsorbed onto neighboring NPs. Analysis of the interparticle forces
reveals attractive long-range interactions of a van der Waals nature.
At separations of 1–3 nm, the interactions are dominated by
attractive ion correlation and repulsive hydration forces giving rise
to an energy minimum at 1.5 nm separation. The superlattice is further
stabilized by hydrogen bonding, which shifts the equilibrium interparticle
distance to 1.1 nm. In contrast, at higher concentrations, IL accumulates
and forms a structured network in the gap between nanoparticles, where
it acts as a solvent that eliminates the repulsive barrier and thus
promotes particle coalescence. This solvent–surfactant duality
of IL opens new opportunities for its use in directing particle assembly.