Issue 14, 2016

Structural properties of polymer-brush-grafted gold nanoparticles at the oil–water interface: insights from coarse-grained simulations

Abstract

In this work, the structural properties of amphiphilic polymer-brush-grafted gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) at the oil–water interface were investigated by coarse-grained simulations. The effects of grafting architecture (diblock, mixed and Janus brush-grafted AuNPs) and hydrophilicity of polymer brushes are discussed. Simulation results indicate that functionalized AuNPs present abundant morphologies including typical core–shell, Janus-type, jellyfish-like, etc., in a water or oil–water solvent environment. It is found that hydrophobic/weak hydrophilic polymer-brush-grafted AuNPs have better phase transfer performance, especially for AuNPs modified with hydrophobic chains as outer blocks and weak hydrophilic chains as inner blocks. This kind of AuNP can cross the interface region and move into the oil phase completely. For hydrophobic/strong hydrophilic polymer-brush-grafted AuNPs, they are trapped in the interface region instead of moving into any phase. The mechanism of phase transfer is ascribed to the flexibility and mobility of outer blocks. Besides, we study the desorption energy by PMF analysis. The results demonstrate that Janus brush-grafted AuNPs show the highest interfacial stability and activity, which can be further strengthened by increasing the hydrophilicity of grafted polymer brushes. This work will promote the industrial applications of polymer-brush-grafted NPs such as phase transfer catalysis and Pickering emulsion catalysis.

Graphical abstract: Structural properties of polymer-brush-grafted gold nanoparticles at the oil–water interface: insights from coarse-grained simulations

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Nov 2015
Accepted
25 Feb 2016
First published
29 Feb 2016

Soft Matter, 2016,12, 3352-3359

Author version available

Structural properties of polymer-brush-grafted gold nanoparticles at the oil–water interface: insights from coarse-grained simulations

X. Quan, C. Peng, J. Dong and J. Zhou, Soft Matter, 2016, 12, 3352 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM02721G

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