Issue 3, 2011

Systematic approach to electrostatically induced 2D crystallization of nanoparticles at liquid interfaces

Abstract

We report an experimental demonstration of a strategy for inducing two-dimensional (2D) crystallization of charged nanoparticles on oppositely charged fluid interfaces. This strategy aims to maximize the interfacial adsorption of nanoparticles, and hence their lateral packing density, by utilizing a combination of weakly charged particles and a high surface charge density on the planar interface. In order to test this approach, we investigated the assembly of cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) on positively charged lipid monolayers at the aqueous solution surface, by means of in situX-ray scattering measurements at the liquid–vapor interface. The assembly was studied as a function of the solution pH, which was used to vary the charge on CPMV, and of the mole fraction of the cationic lipid in the binary lipid monolayer, which set the interface charge density. The 2D crystallization of CPMV occurred in a narrow pH range just above the particle's isoelectric point, where the particle charge was weakly negative, and only when the cationic-lipid fraction in the monolayer exceeded a threshold. The observed 2D crystals exhibited nearly the same packing density as the densest lattice plane within the known 3D crystals of CPMV. The above electrostatic approach of maximizing interfacial adsorption may provide an efficient route to the crystallization of nanoparticles at aqueous interfaces.

Graphical abstract: Systematic approach to electrostatically induced 2D crystallization of nanoparticles at liquid interfaces

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 Sep 2010
Accepted
26 Oct 2010
First published
19 Nov 2010

Soft Matter, 2011,7, 939-945

Systematic approach to electrostatically induced 2D crystallization of nanoparticles at liquid interfaces

S. Kewalramani, S. Wang, Y. Lin, H. G. Nguyen, Q. Wang, M. Fukuto and L. Yang, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 939 DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00956C

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