Self-Assembly of Nanocrystals into Ring-like Superstructures: When Shape, Size, and Material Do Not Matter

Langmuir. 2022 Mar 29;38(12):3896-3906. doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.2c00153. Epub 2022 Mar 17.

Abstract

This manuscript describes a universal method for the spontaneous self-assembly of nanostructures ranging from 2-4 nm spherical particles to ∼440 nm long anisotropic nanorods into ring-like superstructures. The nanostructures composed of Au, Pt, and Pd as surface materials were synthesized in an aqueous cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) solution. The ligand exchange technique with 4-mercaptophenol was applied to replace CTAB from the surface of nanostructures with a functional thiol. The esterification reaction was carried out to covalently attach carboxy-terminated long-chain polystyrene (PS) molecules to the surface of nanostructures. The high grafting density of PS chains around nanocrystals made them highly soluble in a wide range of organic solvents. When a drop of nanostructure solution in a volatile nonpolar solvent was dried on a solid surface, the nanostructures spontaneously arranged themselves in the form of ring-like assemblies. The condensation of microscopic water droplets from the atmosphere on the surface of an evaporating solvent creates templates for the self-assembly of nanostructures into rings. We demonstrate that this self-assembly method is highly universal and can be extended to various nanostructures regardless of their shapes, sizes, and surface materials.