| Literature DB >> 22428094 |
Abstract
An ionic liquid (IL), 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride ([Bmim]Cl) can assemble on prefabricated carboxylic acid-terminated chemical patterns on octadecyltrichlorosilane (OTS) film. The chemical pattern controls the position, shape and size of the IL on the surface. After the IL assembly - by incubating IL drops assembled on sample surface in an OTS silane vapor - an OTS layer was coated on the IL drop surface which encapsulated the IL drop. The OTS-coated capsule can exist stably under aqueous solution. The OTS coating protected the IL drops from being instantaneously dissolved by other solutions. We found that a homogenous catalyst (FeCl(3)) dissolved in [Bmim]Cl can be assembled together on the chemical patterns and subsequently encapsulated together with [Bmim]Cl by OTS coating. The pinhole defects within the vapor-coated silane layer provide space for the catalyst inside the capsule and reactants outside the capsule to meet and react. When the OTS-coated capsule containing a FeCl(3)/IL mixture was soaked under H(2)O(2) solution, the Fe(3+) ions catalyzed the decomposition reaction of hydrogen peroxide at the vapor-coated OTS-water interface. Since the shape and position of the interface is defined by the underneath chemical pattern, our findings show that the OTS-coated IL drops assembled on chemical patterns can be used as novel micro-reactors. This allows homogenous catalytic reactions to occur at the designated interfaces.Entities:
Keywords: AFM; OTS; catalyst encapsulation; chemical pattern; ionic liquid
Year: 2012 PMID: 22428094 PMCID: PMC3304328 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.3.4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1[Bmim]Cl assembles on the OTSpd pattern. a) OTSpd discs fabricated by scanning probe deep oxidation lithography on OTS film. Topography image. The center-to-center distance between two neighboring discs is ~7 μm. b) The same area after [Bmim]Cl was coated on the sample. [Bmim]Cl selectively assembled on the lyophilic OTSpd discs. Topography image. c) Optical image of [Bmim]Cl assembled on the OTSpd patterns. The light background is the OTS film. The red box is the zone shown in a) and b). In this optical image, each IL drop assembled on an OTSpd disc appears as a dark dot.
Figure 2a) A representative OTS-coated [Bmim]Cl drop on the OTSpd pattern. AC mode topography image. b) Optical image of OTS-coated [Bmim]Cl drops on the OTSpd disc array. The imaged was acquired under water. c) The phase image corresponding to the topography image in a). d) The topography (black line) and phase (blue line) channel cross-sectional profiles corresponding to the cyan lines shown in a) and c). The topography cross-section profile reveals that the drop height is 300 nm. The phase cross-section profile indicates that the phase signal of the OTS regions (pink zones in d) and the phase signal of the OTS-coated drop surface are the same because their difference in phase signal is smaller than the noise level.
Figure 3H2O2 decomposition reaction catalyzed by FeCl3. The process was recorded by the optical microscope under 30% H2O2 solution. The FeCl3 [Bmim]Cl solution assembled on two 8 × 8 OTSpd disc arrays. The IL drops were protected by a layer of OTS film coating. a), b), c): The same region with two OTS-coated IL arrays were immersed under 30% H2O2 solution and recorded at 0, 2, and 4 seconds, respectively. The observed oxygen bubbles (black spots) grew with time, indicating that the H2O2 decomposition reaction was proceeding.