Electrostatically Driven Superstructures Assembly of Charged Gold Nanoparticles
ORAL
Abstract
We demonstrate the formation of CsCl-like superstructures by controlling the surface charges of grafted nanoparticles (NPs), showing that these structures remain robust across varying charge densities and temperatures. Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are grafted with water-soluble poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) terminated with charged end groups. PEG with terminal -NH₂ groups create positively charged surfaces, while PEG with terminal -COOH groups provides negatively charged surfaces. We explore the conditions for assembled structures to form by using synchrotron X-ray diffraction and tuning surface charge density by pH adjustments. We show that ionic-like superstructures emerge with pseudo-stoichiometries reflecting the particles' charge density and the binary mixing ratios. In two dimensions, we observe checkerboard-like patterns, while in bulk, CsCl-like structures form, though defects arise from the particle ratio of a binary mixture. We also find that perovskite-like superstructures are formed and assembled under specific pH and binary mixing ratio conditions into body-centered cubic superstructures.
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Presenters
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Binay Priyadarsan Nayak
Ames National Laboratory
Authors
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David Vaknin
Iowa State University
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Binay Priyadarsan Nayak
Ames National Laboratory
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Wenjie Wang
Ames Laboratory, Iowa State University
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Honghu Zhang
Brookhaven National Laboratory
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Alex Travesset
Ames National Laboratory
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Surya Mallapragada
Iowa State University