| Literature DB >> 26451801 |
Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez1, Limei Chen2, Christopher P Deming2, Miguel Angel Rodriguez-Valverde1, Shaowei Chen2, Miguel Angel Cabrerizo-Vilchez1, Roque Hidalgo-Alvarez1.
Abstract
Janus gold nanoparticles (JPs) of ∼4 nm-diameter half functionalized with 1-hexanethiol as a hydrophobic capping ligand exhibit significantly higher interfacial activity, reproducibility and rheological response when the other half is functionalized with 1,2-mercaptopropanediol (JPs-MPD) than with 2-(2-mercaptoethoxy)ethanol (JPs-MEE), both acting as hydrophilic capping ligands. The interfacial pressure measured by pendant drop tensiometry reaches 50 mN m(-1) and 35 mN m(-1) for the JPs-MPD at the water/air and water/decane interface, respectively. At the same area per particle, the JPs-MEE reveal significantly lower interfacial pressure: 15 mN m(-1) and 5 mN m(-1) at the water/air and water/decane interface, respectively. Interfacial dilatational rheology measurements also show an elastic shell behaviour at higher compression states for JPs-MPD while the JPs-MEE present near-zero elasticity. The enhanced interfacial activity of JPs-MPD is explained in terms of chemical and hydration differences between the MPD and MEE ligands, where MPD has a shorter hydrocarbon chain and twice as many hydroxyl terminal groups as MEE.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26451801 DOI: 10.1039/c5sm01908g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soft Matter ISSN: 1744-683X Impact factor: 3.679