posted on 2021-08-26, 19:12authored byTung-Han Yang, Jaewan Ahn, Shi Shi, Dong Qin
The
ligands anchored to the surface of metal nanocrystals play
an important role in controlling their colloidal synthesis for a broad
spectrum of applications, but it remains a daunting challenge to investigate
the ligand–surface and ligand–solvent interactions at
the molecular level. Here, we report the use of surface-enhanced Raman
scattering (SERS) to extract structural information about the binding
of poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP) to Ag nanocubes as well as its conformational
changes in response to solvent quality. When a PVP chain binds to
the surface of a Ag nanocube through some of its carbonyl groups,
the segments between adjacent binding sites are expelled into the
solvent as loops. As a result, the carbonyl peak (νCO) resolved in the SERS spectrum includes the contributions from those
anchored to the surface and those residing on the loops, with their
frequencies located at νCO(Ag) and νCO(free), respectively. While νCO(Ag) remains at a fixed frequency due to the coordination between the
carbonyl groups with Ag surface, the spectral position of νCO(free) is dependent on the solvent. As the strength
of hydrogen bonding between PVP and solvent increases, the peak position
of νCO(free) shifts toward lower frequencies.
When exposed to bad and good solvents in an alternating manner, the
PVP loops undergo conformational changes between collapsed and extended
states, altering the separation between the free carbonyl groups and
the Ag surface and thereby the intensity of the νCO peak.