Nanoparticles with unconventional shapes may exhibit different types of assembly architectures that depend critically on the environmental conditions under which they are formed. Here, we demonstrate how the presence of polymer (polymethyl methacrylate, PMMA) molecules in a solution, in which CdSe(core)/CdS(pods) octapods are initially dispersed, affects the octapod-polymer organization upon solvent evaporation. We show that a fast drop-drying process can induce a remarkable two-dimensional (2D) self-assembly of octapods at the polymer/air interface. In the resulting structure, each octapod is oriented like a "ballerina", that is, only one pod sticks out of the polymer film and is perpendicular to the polymer-air interface, while the opposite pod (with respect to the octapod's center) is fully immersed in the film and points toward the substrate, like a ballerina performing a grand battement. In some areas, a hexagonal-like pattern is formed by the ballerinas in which the six nonvertical pods, which are all embedded in the film, maintain a pod-pod parallel configuration with respect to neighboring particles. We hypothesize that the mechanism responsible for such a self-assembly is based on a fast adsorption of the octapods from bulk solution to the droplet/air interface during the early stages of solvent evaporation. At this interface, the octapods maintain enough rotational freedom to organize mutually in a pod-pod parallel configuration between neighboring octapods. As the solvent evaporates, the octapods form a ballerina-rich octapod-polymer composite in which the octapods are in close contact with the substrate. Finally, we found that the resulting octapod-polymer composite is less hydrophilic than the polymer-only film.
Nanoparticles with unconventional shapes may exhibit different types of assembly architectures that depend critically on the environmental conditions under which they are formed. Here, we demonstrate how the presence of polymer (polymethyl methacrylate, PMMA) molecules in a solution, in which CdSe(core)/CdS(pods) octapods are initially dispersed, affects the octapod-polymer organization upon solvent evaporation. We show that a fast drop-drying process can induce a remarkable two-dimensional (2D) self-assembly of octapods at the polymer/air interface. In the resulting structure, each octapod is oriented like a "ballerina", that is, only one pod sticks out of the polymer film and is perpendicular to the polymer-air interface, while the opposite pod (with respect to the octapod's center) is fully immersed in the film and points toward the substrate, like a ballerina performing a grand battement. In some areas, a hexagonal-like pattern is formed by the ballerinas in which the six nonvertical pods, which are all embedded in the film, maintain a pod-pod parallel configuration with respect to neighboring particles. We hypothesize that the mechanism responsible for such a self-assembly is based on a fast adsorption of the octapods from bulk solution to the droplet/air interface during the early stages of solvent evaporation. At this interface, the octapods maintain enough rotational freedom to organize mutually in a pod-pod parallel configuration between neighboring octapods. As the solvent evaporates, the octapods form a ballerina-rich octapod-polymer composite in which the octapods are in close contact with the substrate. Finally, we found that the resulting octapod-polymer composite is less hydrophilic than the polymer-only film.
Colloidal branched nanocrystals
(bNCs) have attracted scientific attention in recent years due to
their potential use as building blocks of complex and functional superstructures
with possible applications in the fields of nano-optoelectronics,
photonics, or plasmonics.[1−7] In contrast to isotropic nanocrystals, the self-organization of
bNCs (especially those with long “branches”) into ordered
superstructures can be hindered by intricate couplings between the
translational and rotational degrees of freedom at high volume fractions
of nanocrystals (the typical conditions under which ordered assemblies
of colloidal particles are formed) and can cause them to get kinetically
trapped into disordered, amorphous structures. Also, the mutual interactions
between nanocrystals with complex shapes can be dominated by anisotropic
van der Waals (vdW) forces, the strength of which is influenced by
various factors including the shape of the bNCs, the type of stabilizing
molecules bound at their surface, the solvent, and the NC concentration.[8−11] This high dimensionality of the parameter space can be used to potentially
realize many different assembly symmetries, depending on the experimental
conditions under which assembly is attempted, yet at the same time
it complicates explicit predictions. Nevertheless, for branched octapod-shaped
nanocrystals (referred to as “octapods” in the remainder
of this paper) we recently demonstrated a fine control over shape
and size,[12,13] to the point that ordered superstructures
of these nanocrystals have not only been experimentally observed but
also theoretically explained by our groups.[14−16] In fact, we
have shown that different configurations of self-assembled octapods
can be achieved both in bulk solution and on flat substrates; see
Schemes I and II in Figure 1, respectively.[14−16]
Figure 1
(Left)
Sketch of two approaching octapods. For each octapod, the
tip-to-tip length is 2L, and the pod diameter is Dp. (Right) I. The two lowest energy configurations
of an octapod–octapod dimer in bulk solution, as determined
from theoretical calculations of the vdW interactions: (I-1) “interlocked”
configuration and (I-2) pod–pod parallel configuration. Both
configurations are involved in the experimentally observed formation
of 3D octapod superstructures in solution.[14] II. The experimentally observed (and calculated) 2D configurations
of octapods on a flat substrate after solvent evaporation:[16] Square-lattice (II-1) and binary square lattice
(II-2).
In bulk solution, we experimentally demonstrated the formation
of short linear chains of interlocked octapods (Scheme I-1 in Figure 1) through an aging process of an octapod-rich toluene
solution. After the addition of acetonitrile longer linear chains
were formed,[14] followed by the self-assembly
of the chains into a porous three-dimensional (3D) superstructure
with parallel pod–pod alignment (Scheme I-2 in Figure 1). Using theoretical calculations of the vdW interactions,
we demonstrated that the interlocked and pod–pod parallel arrangements
are energetically the most favorable configurations in bulk solution,[14] thus explaining the experimental observations.(Left)
Sketch of two approaching octapods. For each octapod, the
tip-to-tip length is 2L, and the pod diameter is Dp. (Right) I. The two lowest energy configurations
of an octapod–octapod dimer in bulk solution, as determined
from theoretical calculations of the vdW interactions: (I-1) “interlocked”
configuration and (I-2) pod–pod parallel configuration. Both
configurations are involved in the experimentally observed formation
of 3D octapod superstructures in solution.[14] II. The experimentally observed (and calculated) 2D configurations
of octapods on a flat substrate after solvent evaporation:[16] Square-lattice (II-1) and binary square lattice
(II-2).On flat substrates, we demonstrated
instead that ordered monolayers
of octapods can be formed in a side-to-side configuration through
solvent evaporation. The monolayers could consist either of simple
or binary square lattices, depending on the aspect ratio L/Dp of the pods (see Scheme II-1 and
II-2 in Figure 1).[15,16] In those experiments, both a fast solvent evaporation and the presence
of the substrate limit the 3D rotation of the octapods and constrain
the octapods to stand on four pods on the substrate, thereby preventing
the formation of interlocked structures in the “coffee stain”.
To date, octapod superstructures have thus been obtained by exploiting
either the more favorable interlocked configuration in solution, or
the additional constraint imposed by the presence of a flat substrate.Apparently, assemblies with the pod–pod parallel configuration
(Scheme I-2 in Figure 1) are difficult to realize,
most likely because they require a good balance between steric repulsion
at short distances and vdW forces to cause the two octapods to approach
each other along parallel axes.[14] This
is far less likely to be achieved for single octapods in bulk solution,
given their geometrical restrictions in addition to the steric/vdW
balance requirement.[17] In order to achieve
the parallel pod–pod configuration for octapods, long pods
are preferred over short ones. The reason is that the increased contact
area between longer pods in the pod–pod configuration causes
stronger pod–pod vdW attractions, which can dominate over the
core–core vdW attractions that stabilize the interlocked configuration.
It should be noted that small-scale assemblies of tetrapodal branched
NCs with parallel pod–pod configurations have already been
reported. This type of organization was achieved both via the Langmuir–Blodgett
technique and by exploiting attractive depletion forces in a surfactant-rich
(or polymer-rich) solution of NCs.[18,19]In this
work, we demonstrate the formation of superstructures of
octapods that fully exploit the parallel pod–pod configuration.
Such an assembly was serendipitously discovered upon drying a solution
of octapods and excess unwashed organics on a SiO2 substrate
at room temperature in a solvent-saturated atmosphere. Here, the excess
organics, which stem from the synthesis, are impurities mainly consisting
of free unbound surfactants and Cd-phosphate complexes. Scanning electron
microscopy (SEM) analysis of the sample after evaporation evidenced
a ringlike deposit on the substrate with a primarily hexagonal-like
structure as discerned from the top view shown in Figure 2a.
Figure 2
Arrangement of octapods after slow drying of a drop from
an organic-rich
toluene solution. (a) LABE-SEM top-view image revealing the self-assembly
of octapods into a hexagonal-like structure in the coffee-stain region
formed on the SiO2 substrate; the inset shows a close-up
view of the same image. (b) A 45°-tilt-SEI-SEM image demonstrating
the presence of the organic residues (light gray); for each octapod
only the upper section of the pod pointing upward actually protrudes
out of the organic film (see sketch in the inset). (c) A 45°-tilt-LEI-SEM
image of the same zone evidencing that the remaining seven pods are
inside the organic layer (see sketch in the inset). (d) Sketches summarizing
the observed assembly in both top and side view.
Arrangement of octapods after slow drying of a drop from
an organic-rich
toluene solution. (a) LABE-SEM top-view image revealing the self-assembly
of octapods into a hexagonal-like structure in the coffee-stain region
formed on the SiO2 substrate; the inset shows a close-up
view of the same image. (b) A 45°-tilt-SEI-SEM image demonstrating
the presence of the organic residues (light gray); for each octapod
only the upper section of the pod pointing upward actually protrudes
out of the organic film (see sketch in the inset). (c) A 45°-tilt-LEI-SEM
image of the same zone evidencing that the remaining seven pods are
inside the organic layer (see sketch in the inset). (d) Sketches summarizing
the observed assembly in both top and side view.Figure 2a, which was acquired with
a low-angle
backscattered electron detector (LABE), reveals that the edges of
the hexagons are formed by six pairs of pods from neighboring octapods
(some of the hexagons are framed in yellow in Figure 2a to illustrate this). For each octapod belonging to this
superstructure, only one tip was observed when the same zone was scanned
with an upper secondary electron detector (SEI), see Figure 2b. This image shows a strong contrast between the
octapods (bright posts) and the organic film (light gray); see also
a top view of the structure in the Supporting
Information Figure S1a,b. A SEM image of the same zone, using
a lower secondary electron detector (LEI), Figure 2c, demonstrates that the octapods are standing upright with
one pod on the substrate (see the inset), in what we refer to as a
“ballerina” configuration forming the hexagonal network
(see sketches in Figure 2d).Starting
from this point, we intentionally prepared mixtures of
octapods with a conventional polymer (polymethyl methacrylate, PMMA)
in order to improve the control over the self-assembly process into
this “ballet of nanoballerinas”. For this purpose, we
first washed the octapods several times to remove the excess of organics
that derived from the synthesis. This cleaning was also useful to
improve the dispersion of octapods in the polymer solutions and to
ensure a more direct contact with the polymer. As screening experiments,
we mixed solutions of PMMA and octapods in toluene at different concentrations
to estimate the solubility threshold using (i) the turbidity of the
solution as a first sign of aggregation, and (ii) dynamic light scattering
measurements to assess the size of aggregates after the addition of
the polymer. We also varied the molecular weight of the polymer, Mw, in these experiments, see Supporting Information Figure S2. We found that polymer concentrations
above 5% vol induced visible aggregation of octapods in PMMA solutions,
especially for high Mw. Therefore, the
concentration of PMMA (with Mw = 120 000
g/mol) was maintained far below 5% vol in the subsequent experiments.
This ensures a large number of well-dispersed octapods in the toluene-PMMA
solution, right before the toluene evaporation and the film formation.
Also the concentration of octapods in the composite solution was found
to play an important role, since large-scale self-assembly requires
a sufficiently high initial concentration. For an octapod concentration
below 10–7 M only small-scale structures were formed
independent of the PMMA concentration (see Supporting
Information Figure S3a).In another series of experiments,
drops from repeatedly washed
octapod solutions with no added polymer, as well as drops from octapod-polymer
mixtures, were cast on carbon-coated Cu grids for transmission electron
microscopy (TEM) and on a 10 nm carbon-coated SiO2 wafer.
Both types of substrate have poor hydrophilic character, which should
help to avoid ringlike deposits. The solvent was allowed to evaporate
in air (yielding a faster evaporation rate) at room temperature (25
°C) and relative humidity of 55%. When polymer-free octapod solutions
were drop-cast, we found after sufficiently fast evaporation that
the octapods had four pods in contact with the substrate (see Figure 3a and Supporting Information Figure S1d). These octapods formed short-ranged 2D-ordered structures
in some areas, depicted by the sketch in Figure 3a, similar to the square-lattice configuration reported by us in
a previous work.[16] However, for sufficiently
slow evaporation we found for the same polymer-free octapod solution
mainly interlocked chain-like assemblies, similar to those reported
in another one of our papers[14] (see Supporting Information Figure S1c). This exemplifies
the key role of the excess organic residues in the self-assembly of
the ballerina configuration.
Figure 3
(a) TEM image of the repeatedly washed toluene suspension
with
octapods after fast solvent evaporation. The particles are touching
the substrate (carbon support film on Cu grid for TEM) with four pods.
Most of the octapods formed a short-ranged square-lattice-like structure.
The cartoon embedded in the figure highlights the octapod pattern.
(b) HAADF-STEM image showing the self-assembled ballerina network
of octapods formed after drop-casting of PMMA-octapod solutions (PMMA
at 1% vol) and fast solvent evaporation; the insets evidence the locally
regular hexagonal-like structure. Scale bar: 50 nm. (c) Top-view SEM
image of the sample in (b) that confirms the ballerina configuration,
also showing that the octapods are partially embedded in the polymer.
(d) A 45°-tilt-SEM image in which the single protruding pod from
each of the embedded octapods can be discerned (framed in yellow dashed
lines).
A remarkably different self-assembled
network of octapods was obtained
after adding PMMA at 1% vol to the NC solution (1:4 volume ratio of
octapod/PMMA solution). Drop-casting the octapod-polymer mixture and
evaporating the solvent (see Figure 3b) yielded
a network of octapods with a primarily hexagonal-like structure, as
evidenced in the inset in Figure 3b. Also,
the octapods in this configuration were partially immersed in the
PMMA layer (which appears as the intermediate gray level in Figure 3c). The thickness of the PMMA layer embedding the
ballerina assemblies on the C-support film on the TEM grid was estimated
to be 71 ± 7 nm by evaluating the inelastic scattering undergone
by electrons in the TEM (log-ratio method, see Supporting Information);[20] this
thickness is about 73% of the tip-to-tip distance 2L of an octapod (see the left sketch of Figure 1). A tilted SEM image of the structure demonstrated that the octapods
have one pod sticking out of the polymer/air interface (bright posts
in Figure 3d), forming the ballerina configuration
in the PMMA.Detailed SEM observation of samples from which
the polymer was
removed by an oxygen plasma treatment confirmed that the ballerina-hexagonal
arrangement of the octapods consisted of one single layer on the substrate
(see Figure 4a). This arrangement was further
confirmed by HAADF- STEM images taken at different tilt angles (see
Figure 4b, Supporting Information Figure S4 and movie SI1.avi and SI2.avi). The pod–pod parallel
configuration of neighboring octapods is indeed consistent with the
hexagonal-like arrangements of the bright posts viewed in SEM (Figure 2) and in HAADF-STEM plan-view images (Figure 3b).
Figure 4
(a) SEI-SEM image after
removing the polymer (via an oxygen plasma
treatment) evidencing that the ballerinas are standing on the substrate.
The inset shows a close-up view of an ordered domain. The scale bar
is 60 nm. (b) HAADF-STEM images at different tilt angles confirming
the pod–pod parallel arrangement between octapods forming the
hexagonal array of ballerinas. (c) Cartoon explaining the formation
of the ballerinas at the droplet/air interface. (I). The particles
are constrained to move toward the interface and remain trapped there
during drying; weak vdW and interfacial interactions are responsible
for the pod–pod configuration (II–III).
(a) TEM image of the repeatedly washed toluene suspension
with
octapods after fast solvent evaporation. The particles are touching
the substrate (carbon support film on Cu grid for TEM) with four pods.
Most of the octapods formed a short-ranged square-lattice-like structure.
The cartoon embedded in the figure highlights the octapod pattern.
(b) HAADF-STEM image showing the self-assembled ballerina network
of octapods formed after drop-casting of PMMA-octapod solutions (PMMA
at 1% vol) and fast solvent evaporation; the insets evidence the locally
regular hexagonal-like structure. Scale bar: 50 nm. (c) Top-view SEM
image of the sample in (b) that confirms the ballerina configuration,
also showing that the octapods are partially embedded in the polymer.
(d) A 45°-tilt-SEM image in which the single protruding pod from
each of the embedded octapods can be discerned (framed in yellow dashed
lines).This superstructure formation
is reminiscent of the self-assembly
of NCs induced by liquid/air interface techniques, which result in
uniform distributions of NCs at the interface under equilibrium conditions.[18,21−24] Unlike controlled solvent evaporation, which given enough time is
in favor of 3D ordered structures, fast solvent evaporation forces
the nanoparticles out of equilibrium and may drive the system toward
a different self-assembled state.[25−27] The formation of the
ballerina network must be a consequence of the addition of the PMMA
to the octapod solution, because in the absence of the PMMA no ordered
domains with the ballerina configuration were observed. Moreover,
we note that the observed hexagonal-like arrangements of ballerina
octapods are not densely packed, which indicates that the forces exerted
during drying are insufficient to drive the octapods to their optimal
packing, in contrast with the results obtained for drop-cast, slow-dried
solutions of octapods without PMMA added.[15,16] This suggests that forces other than those caused by drying play
a dominant role during the later stages of the self-assembly. Hence
we hypothesize that the octapods reach the observed ballerina configuration
in the following three stages:• Stage I (Figure 4c-I): immediately
after drop deposition, the octapods are free to diffuse through the
toluene-PMMA medium, as the viscosity of the solution is still low.
The fast evaporation of the toluene, however, tends to force the octapods
to the droplet–air interface. This process can be explained
by considering the octapod diffusion coefficient D in the solution. The octapod diffusion is time-dependent due to
the changes in the viscosity η of the medium during drying,
as can be seen from the Stokes–Einstein equation for nanoparticles
with a hydrodynamic radius r, given by D = kBT/6πηr with kB as the Boltzmann constant
and T as the temperature. Because of the increase
in the viscosity of the PMMA-solution during the toluene evaporation,
the diffusion of the octapods D decreases significantly.
This causes the octapod movement to eventually become slower than
the advancement rate of the polymer–air interface, thereby
forcing the octapods to the interface.• Stage II (Figure 4c-II): at the
interface, the free energy of adsorption causes the octapods to adopt
a specific, albeit yet unknown, orientation. It should be noted that
the vertical constraint provided by the interfacial energy that forces
the octapods to remain trapped at the interface does not hinder its
lateral movements. In this stage, as reported in other works on interfacial
self-assembly,[28−32] the adsorption of the octapods at the interface could induce the
formation of a capillary multipole structure around the NCs. The multipolar
octapod–octapod capillary interactions may then facilitate
the octapods coming together in a specific way. For instance, the
octapods could approach each other with their pods almost aligned,
leading the way for interactions that dominate the multipolar component
at short ranges to take over, causing the already prealigned octapods
to self-assemble into a pod–pod ballerina network. However,
it is equally possible that the droplet shrinking due to fluid evaporation
is the dominant term in the drying forces that cause the octapods
to be driven together. Moreover, capillary attractions and interfacial
deformation could only play a subdominant role in the formation of
the ballerina network. In this scenario, the final step of the self-assembly
might then be entirely caused by other effects, such as substrate-mediated
orientational ordering. We therefore conjecture that in Stage II the
octapods are driven together by a combination of droplet shrinking
and capillary attraction, both of which may dominate the aggregation
of the octapods at different points during the drying.(a) SEI-SEM image after
removing the polymer (via an oxygen plasma
treatment) evidencing that the ballerinas are standing on the substrate.
The inset shows a close-up view of an ordered domain. The scale bar
is 60 nm. (b) HAADF-STEM images at different tilt angles confirming
the pod–pod parallel arrangement between octapods forming the
hexagonal array of ballerinas. (c) Cartoon explaining the formation
of the ballerinas at the droplet/air interface. (I). The particles
are constrained to move toward the interface and remain trapped there
during drying; weak vdW and interfacial interactions are responsible
for the pod–pod configuration (II–III).• Stage III (Figure 4c-III): when
the octapods are in mutual close proximity, they start to interact
presumably mostly through vdW forces, since the ballerina network
shows pod–pod configurations. Drying and adsorption free energies
are apparently sufficiently slow and low, respectively, to allow the
octapods to reorient from their adsorbed orientation to one where
they form pod–pod parallel arrangements with their neighbors
(see the inset in Figure 4a and Figure 4b), rather than be forced together into a densely
packed state. As mentioned in the description of Stage II, the reorientation
may be induced by multipolar interactions stemming from the deformation
of the interface, but could equally well be caused by a host of other
forces, including restrictions imposed by the substrate.In
our description of the various stages, we stated that interfacial
adsorption could play a significant role in the self-assembly mechanism,
since it might favor a configuration that facilitates octapods forming
pod–pod contacts through vdW forces rather than interlocked
or dense-packed configurations; the interfacial adsorption may even
prevent the formation of interlocked contacts via a free-energy penalty.
Therefore, we calculated the adsorption free energy for the octapod/polymer
system (see Supporting Information for
additional details) in order to gauge the relevance of adsorption
on the formation of the ballerina configuration. Similar calculations
have proven their usefulness in clarifying the adsorption of nanoparticles
at fluid interfaces and the self-assembled structured that these particles
formed.[21] In our calculations, we considered
the optimal adhesion at a flat nondeformable toluene–air interface
for a single octapod as a function of the (cosine of the) contact
angle (cos θ in Figure 5) between the
octapod material and the solvent interface,[33,34] as the system’s wettability depends on the solvent (with
polymer)–octapod, air–octapod, and solvent–air
surface tensions. We also limited ourselves to a single contact angle
all over the octapod surface, thereby ignoring possible chemical and
structural heterogeneities to avoid further complications in the analysis.
However, even such a simple model can give insights into the behavior
of bNCs at an interface. Our results suggest that the octapod’s
orientation and trapping at the interface can be strongly influenced
by the wettability of the particles. However, they also show that
the cause of the experimental observations is not to be sought solely
in an adsorption mechanism, as neither of the orientations of octapods
obtained here corresponds to the ballerina configuration (see Supporting Information Figure S4). We found instead
two optimal trapping configurations, as shown in Figure 5, for which the octapods are partially wetted by the polymer
solution: (I) four-arms lie flat on the interface and two stick out
on either side and (II) the octapod rests on the interface with four
tips slightly penetrating it. We refer to these configurations as
archetypical, because over the range of contact angles that we considered
there are only slight variations in the exact position and orientation
of the octapod at the interface with respect to these two configurations
(see Supporting Information Figure S4).
However, there is a very sharp transition from configuration I to
configuration II, with no intermediate states.
Figure 5
The archetypical configurations
for an octapod adsorbed at a flat
nondeformable interface between air (below) and toluene/polymer (above)
for a cosine of the contact angle in the range (I) 0.0 ≤ cos
θ ≤ 0.3 and (II) 0.3 < cos θ ≤ 0.9; the
octapod is fully detached for cos θ > 0.9.
The archetypical configurations
for an octapod adsorbed at a flat
nondeformable interface between air (below) and toluene/polymer (above)
for a cosine of the contact angle in the range (I) 0.0 ≤ cos
θ ≤ 0.3 and (II) 0.3 < cos θ ≤ 0.9; the
octapod is fully detached for cos θ > 0.9.Our result can be explained by the way the system
minimizes its
free energy. When there is little difference between the media (cos
θ is small) the octapod excludes the maximum surface area from
the interface, while when the difference between the media is large
(cos θ is large) the octapod minimizes its contact with the
energetically unfavored medium. This is true in general, since the
free energy of adsorption can be lowered by removing part of the interface,
but strongly hydrophobic/hydrophilic colloids would still prefer to
minimize their contact with the unfavored medium.[21] Note that neither of the archetypical configurations corresponds
to the observed ballerina configuration. We therefore conjecture that
the ballerina configuration is unlikely to be explained by adsorption
to the interface alone, since the ballerina configuration itself does
not exclude a particularly big part of the interface, nor does it
seem to minimize contact with the air. Moreover, adding a polymer,
which changes the contact angle properties of the system, is unlikely
to prevent the octapods from being driven toward their dense-packed
configuration in an adsorption-only self-assembly scenario. It is,
however, possible that when the octapods are in close proximity the
deformation of the interface aids in the formation of the ballerina
network. The final state is likely achieved by the interplay between
various effects, such as, adsorption, vdW forces, restrictions imposed
by the substrate, and the slowing of the dynamics in the final stage
of the self-assembly brought on by the increased viscosity of the
solution.Because the polymer content is known to strongly influence
the
adsorption properties, we considered the assemblies that formed upon
varying the polymer content. We found different octapod configurations
in the PMMA film when the amount of polymer injected into the octapod
solution was increased from 0.5 to 5% vol. (see Figure 6a–c). Octapods with four pods in contact with the substrate
were observed for a PMMA concentration between 0 and 0.5% vol. A sharp
change in the self-assembly behavior was observed when the PMMA concentration
was increased up to 5.0% vol since ballerinas formed at 1% vol as
we have seen already, and interlocked chains of 5–8 octapods
were found in these films at 5% vol. This remarkable variation in
configurations by changing the PMMA content is attributed to an increase
in the number of polymer molecules wrapping the octapod surface, which
can further lead to the formation of well-ordered aggregates by stronger
octapod–octapod interactions.[35−37] These conditions, however,
are not in favor of the ballerina configuration, as both the viscosity
of the solution and the thickness of the final film are increased
with an increasing PMMA content. In this case, because the diffusion
coefficient D of the octapods is drastically decreased,
the movement of the octapods is limited and they are forced to remain
embedded in the polymer film until the end of the solvent evaporation.
Figure 6
(a–c) TEM images of the PMMA-based nanocomposite
revealing
how octapod configurations depend on the polymer content/thickness.
(a) Octapods standing on four-pods touching the substrate with an
evident strong dewetting of the polymer (PMMA 0.5% vol.) on the substrate
as can be seen in panel d; scale bar: 200 nm. (b) Octapods in the
ballerina configuration (PMMA 1.0% vol.). (c) Interlocked octapods
forming short chains (PMMA 5.0% vol.); the insets show a close-up
view of each arrangement; scale bar: 50 nm. (d–f) SEM images
evidence the morphology of the films depending on the polymer content;
scale bars: 200 nm. Strong dewetting for more diluted solutions (d)
and a more uniform and thicker film from concentrated PMMA solutions
loaded with octapods (e,f). The insets show a 30°-tilt-SEM image
of the ballerina configuration and the chainlike interlocked octapods
after removal of the polymer by oxygen plasma treatment.
Our observations by SEM of the samples prepared on carbon-coated
SiO2 substrates revealed a strong dewetting of the polymer
film on the substrate in the case of a more diluted PMMA solution
(see Figure 6d), whereas samples containing
larger amounts of PMMA resulted in more homogeneous films (see Figure 6e,f) because of the lower fluidity of the polymer.
We observed a higher shrinkage of the polymer in the center area in
the sample containing 1% of PMMA (see Figure 6e), which we attributed to the solvent evaporation rate. Measurements
of the thickness of these films conducted by a nanoprofilometer indicated
a variation from the center area to the edges of the drop spreading
from about 68 to 100 nm and from 230 to 300 nm for 1 and 5% of PMMA,
respectively. Removal of the polymer revealed that the ballerina configuration
was obtained in the 1% PMMA film (see inset in Figure 6e) in the area with a thickness of ∼70 nm, while interlocked
octapods were observed for 5% PMMA content (see inset in Figure 6f).(a–c) TEM images of the PMMA-based nanocomposite
revealing
how octapod configurations depend on the polymer content/thickness.
(a) Octapods standing on four-pods touching the substrate with an
evident strong dewetting of the polymer (PMMA 0.5% vol.) on the substrate
as can be seen in panel d; scale bar: 200 nm. (b) Octapods in the
ballerina configuration (PMMA 1.0% vol.). (c) Interlocked octapods
forming short chains (PMMA 5.0% vol.); the insets show a close-up
view of each arrangement; scale bar: 50 nm. (d–f) SEM images
evidence the morphology of the films depending on the polymer content;
scale bars: 200 nm. Strong dewetting for more diluted solutions (d)
and a more uniform and thicker film from concentrated PMMA solutions
loaded with octapods (e,f). The insets show a 30°-tilt-SEM image
of the ballerina configuration and the chainlike interlocked octapods
after removal of the polymer by oxygen plasma treatment.In order to further study the impact of the ballerina
network on
the surface properties of the PMMA composite film, we evaluated how
this configuration affects the contact angle of water wetting the
film. Contact angle measurements were performed using the sessile-drop
method with ultrapure water (see the Supporting
Information for details). Figure 7 shows
the mean contact angle determined on the octapod-PMMA thin film deposited
on carbon-coated SiO2 substrates. Both a SiO2 and a PMMA thin film on a carbon coated SiO2 substrate
were used as control materials.
Figure 7
Contact angle with (ultrapure) water determined
for the ballerina
network on the PMMA film revealing loss of the hydrophilic character
of the PMMA film attributed to the presence of the nanopinned surface
formed by the octapods.
Contact angle with (ultrapure) water determined
for the ballerina
network on the PMMA film revealing loss of the hydrophilic character
of the PMMA film attributed to the presence of the nanopinned surface
formed by the octapods.The octapod/PMMA substrate gives rise to a significantly
higher
value of the contact angle than the references; after the formation
of the ballerina network islands on the PMMA film, the contact angle
increased significantly, that is, by more than 10° from 71.5
to 85.3°. This is attributed to the effect of the pod protruding
from the polymer layer that is formed during the last stage of the
evaporation in the thinner area of the film. Because of a variation
in the polymer flow, the local roughness of the film may also be increased,
thereby helping to pin the drop of water and inducing a more hydrophobic
character in the hydrophilic PMMA.In summary, we have presented
a new assembly of octapod-shaped
nanocrystals formed via fast drop casting of a PMMA/toluene/octapod
solution on a flat substrate. The networks that we observed consist
of octapods partially immersed in a thin polymer film. These octapods
stand on the substrate with one pod oriented perpendicular to the
substrate, while the opposing pod slightly penetrates the polymer/air
interface. Neighboring ballerina octapods have a parallel pod–pod
arrangement between the remaining six pods that causes them to form
a hexagonal-like lattice. We have studied how the octapod self-assembly
changes with the increase in polymer content from the formation of
nonordered aggregates at low polymer concentration to the formation
of ordered hexagonal ballerinas or short linear chains at higher polymer
concentrations. We relate this to an increased probability of attractive
pod–pod interactions. We hypothesize that upon increasing the
PMMA content, the adsorption of octapods at the interface, in combination
with van der Waals interactions between the octapods, and the restrictions
imposed by the substrate, are the key parameters that control the
formation of the ballerina configuration. These ingredients might
all play an important role during the different regimes of solvent
evaporation of a viscous solution, where a droplet spreads and dries
on a wettable substrate. We have demonstrated that the ballerina octapod-polymer
composite has an enhanced hydrophobicity with respect to that of a
pure polymer film. Better understanding of the key parameters involved
in the formation of this unusual network will be the subject of follow-up
studies, which may provide indications for the scaling-up of the process
and the optimization of this structure, leading to its potential use
in nanodevices. For instance, achieving a ballerina network in a polymer
thin film may improve its structural and mechanical stability, as
it might work as nanopinned network to impede crack propagation.
Authors: Matthew D Goodman; Lei Zhao; Karen A Derocher; Jun Wang; Surya K Mallapragada; Zhiqun Lin Journal: ACS Nano Date: 2010-04-27 Impact factor: 15.881