Temporally Anticorrelated Motion of Nanoparticles at a Liquid Interface

J Phys Chem Lett. 2015 Jan 2;6(1):54-9. doi: 10.1021/jz502210c. Epub 2014 Dec 12.

Abstract

Quantum dots at the hexane-glycerol interface exhibited unexpected behavior including highly dynamic adsorption/desorption, where the lateral nanoparticle motion was anomalously fast immediately after adsorption and prior to desorption. At the interface, particles exhibited pseudo-Brownian lateral motion, in which the instantaneous diffusion coefficient was temporally anticorrelated, in agreement with our simulations involving fractional Brownian motion in the surface-normal direction. These phenomena suggest that, in contrast to the conventional picture for colloidal particles, nanoparticles explore a landscape of metastable interfacial positions, with different exposures to the two adjacent phases.

Keywords: Brownian motion; anticorrelation; interfacial diffusion; nanoparticles.