Our effort on engineering next generation nano-material assemblies
forms a major component of our research program bridging traditional
inorganic and organic materials. The research program has been
successful in demonstrating nano-composite structures via ligand
templating. We have demonstrated the formation of a macroscopic,
3-dimensional self-supporting composite that are assembled by
reaction of the organic passivant layer forming a composite
composed of individual gold and CdSe nanomaterials. The structures
can be described as flexible networks producing a non-statistical,
glassy composite composed of a regular 6:1 CdSe:Au composition.
(figure 3)
The mechanism for the formation of the assembly is pH controlled
via acid/base equilibrium due to a proton exchange between the
R-NH3+ group on 2-aminoethanethiol passivated CdSe and the R-COO-
group stabilizing the citrate-passivated Au surface. Analysis
of SAED (selected area electron diffraction) patterns in the
TEM indicates the free standing composite exhibits a surprising
degree of short-range ordering in the material. This suggests
these “flexible” composite materials may provide
a paradigm for the design of electronic networks based on self-assembling
lattices using the competition of VdW, steric, and covalent
interactions to drive nano-structural motifs.
Development of nano-scale composites may provide potential new
systems for a wide range of material applications. Control over
the 3-dimensional assembly of these nanoscale composites can
be controlled by thermodynamic equilibrium reactions, in essence
a competition between the thermodynamic interaction potentials
for steric, van der Waals, and covalent energy terms. The magnitude
of the covalent energy term contribution should be manipulated
by the choice of the terminal functional group on the passivating
layer of one nanomaterial and the energetics of coordination
on the surface of a second nanomaterial. By application of acid/base
equilibrium control, glassy assemblies composed of a 6:1 ratio
of two different nanomaterials can be achieved which exhibit
short-range order. Further analysis of this mechanism, by control
of chain length, terminal functional group, and nanomaterial
may allow tailored composite 3-dimensional structures to be
designed. (figure 5)
Nanoparticles of coinage metals can be prepared as near monodisperse
materials with surface passivating ligands that act to stabilize
the surface of the particle, lower surface energy, and maintain
the separation distance between individual particles in a self-assembled
structure. Extension of our initial studies into Au-CdSe composites,
have led us to investigate the onset of electronic coupling
in assemblies of Au nanoparticles passivated by bifunctional
ligands, in which the ligand acts as a template to control particle
separation. The potential to assemble 3-dimensional architectures
of metal nanoparticles opens the possibility to both control
and probe the onset of correlated electronic and optical properties
arising from the quantum mechanical coupling of individual nanoparticle
wavefunctions. The onset of collective electronic behavior in
these metal nanoparticle assemblies are modulated by the oscillator
strength of the oscillating dipole field for the metal nanoparticle,
which is size dependent; and the particle separation, which
is a function of both the ligand steric effects and the dispersional
forces arising from Van der Waals contributions between particles.
The steric repulsion energy (Esteric) between two nanoparticles
surface stabilized with alkyl ligands scales directly with the
particle diameter and the square of the ligand length. The Van
der Waals attractive forces (EvdW) between particles increase
with the square of the ratio of the particle radius and center-to-center
separation distances.
We have analyzed the size dependent properties of a series of
gold nanoparticles assembled into 3-D aggregate structures covalently
linked by hetero-functional ligands. We can systematically modulate
the separation distances of Au and the overall coupling of Au
nanomaterials by use of a hetero-functional ligand. Steric and
Van der Waals effects can be assessed by analysis of TEM spacing
and FTIR ligand packing analysis. Variation of the optical properties
arising from the onset of quantum mechanical coupling is investigated
as a function of the ligand length and the nanoparticle core
size. With increasing core size and decreasing ligand lengths,
EVdW forces tend to lead to particle coalescence resulting in
a loss of the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) of the nanoparticles
at 525 nm and the emergence of a collective particle plasmon
band around 650 nm. At longer ligand lengths and smaller core
sizes EVdW and Ecovalent compete to control assembly formation
and smaller shifts in the SPR to lower energy are observed as
a function of the interparticle spacing. The observation of
collective properties opens the potential to design nano-assemblies
that respond to changes in particle spacing for applications
in nanoelectronics, memory storage devices, nonlinear optics,
sensor science, catalysis, and light energy conversion systems.
Interested in learning more?
Read the published articles: "Synthesis and Characterization of Metal-Semiconductor
Nano-composites." Cumberland, S.L.; Strouse, G.F. Mat.
Res. Soc. Symp. Proc., 642, J7.8 (2001). [ view
article - PDF ]
"Analysis of the Nature of Oxyanion Adsorption on Gold
Nanomaterial Surfaces." Cumberland, S.L.; Strouse, G.F.
Langmuir, 18, 269-276 (2002).
[ view article
- PDF ]

In a recent study in our lab, we have initiated a study of organic
polymers as molecular scaffolding for CdSe nano-composites.
These polymer based nanocomposites exhibit efficient energy
transfer from the organc oligomers to the nanomaterial. Energy
transfer appears to be dominated by a dipole-dipole exchange
mechanism in which the size dependent nature of this energy
transfer process is clearly evident in the loss of quantum efficiency
for transfer above 5 nm. The quenching of the polymer by appended
nanoscale CdSe via directed energy transfer proceeds with near
unit quantum efficiency in the region where the spectral overlap
<J-integral> is favorable. At 5 nm the nature of the directed
energy transfer from the polymer to CdSe can be modulated by
photolysis.
The observation of a photo-initiated switch in the efficiency
of energy transfer coupled to recent crystal structures of the
oligomers suggest that structural reorientation of the composite
may lead to the opening of transverse optical energy transfer
along a pi-pi stacking direction. We are developing a series
of oligomerically linked (n = 1, 3, 5) systems based on PAO,
phenylethynylene, appended to CdSe. The PAO is linked to the
CdSe through a benzylic thiol bond. (figure 7) The size dependent
nature of energy transfer allows fine control over energy transport
from the surface of the CdSe. (figure 8)
Interested in learning more? Contact Artjay
Javier
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