Literature DB >> 29611426

Micellar Mimicry of Intermetallic C14 and C15 Laves Phases by Aqueous Lyotropic Self-Assembly.

Carlos M Baez-Cotto1, Mahesh K Mahanthappa1,2.   

Abstract

Concentration-dependent supramolecular self-assembly of amphiphilic molecules in water furnishes a variety of nanostructured lyotropic liquid crystals (LLCs), which typically display high symmetry bicontinuous network and discontinuous micellar morphologies. Aqueous dispersions of soft spherical micelles derived from small molecule amphiphile hydration typically pack into exemplary body-centered cubic and closest-packed LLCs. However, investigations of hydrated mixtures of the ionic surfactant tetramethylammonium decanoate loaded with 40 wt % n-decane (TMADec-40) revealed the formation of a high symmetry bicontinuous double diamond LLC, as well as cubic C15 and hexagonal C14 Laves LLC phases that mirror the MgCu2 and MgZn2 intermetallic structure types, respectively. Detailed small-angle X-ray scattering analyses demonstrate that the complex C15 and C14 LLCs exhibit large unit cells, in which 12 or more ∼3-4 nm diameter micelles of multiple discrete sizes arrange into tetrahedral close packing arrangements with exceptional long-range translational order. The symmetry breaking that drives self-assembly into these low-symmetry LLC phases is rationalized in terms of a frustrated balance between maximizing counterion-mediated micellar cohesion within the ensemble of oil-swollen particles, while simultaneously optimizing local spherical particle symmetry to minimize molecular-level variations in surfactant solvation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Frank−Kasper phases; liquid crystals; lyotropic phase; self-assembly; superlattices; surfactants

Year:  2018        PMID: 29611426     DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b07475

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Nano        ISSN: 1936-0851            Impact factor:   15.881


  5 in total

1.  Symmetry breaking in particle-forming diblock polymer/homopolymer blends.

Authors:  Guo Kang Cheong; Frank S Bates; Kevin D Dorfman
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-07-07       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Consequences of Convex Nanopore Chemistry on Confined Water Dynamics.

Authors:  Grayson L Jackson; Sung A Kim; Ashish Jayaraman; Souleymane O Diallo; Mahesh K Mahanthappa
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2020-02-17       Impact factor: 2.991

3.  Screening Libraries of Amphiphilic Janus Dendrimers Based on Natural Phenolic Acids to Discover Monodisperse Unilamellar Dendrimersomes.

Authors:  Irene Buzzacchera; Qi Xiao; Hong Han; Khosrow Rahimi; Shangda Li; Nina Yu Kostina; B Jelle Toebes; Samantha E Wilner; Martin Möller; Cesar Rodriguez-Emmenegger; Tobias Baumgart; Daniela A Wilson; Christopher J Wilson; Michael L Klein; Virgil Percec
Journal:  Biomacromolecules       Date:  2018-11-07       Impact factor: 6.988

4.  γ-Glutamyl transpeptidase-activatable near-infrared nanoassembly for tumor fluorescence imaging-guided photothermal therapy.

Authors:  Fangyuan Zhou; Shikui Yang; Chao Zhao; Wangwang Liu; Xufeng Yao; Hui Yu; Xiaolian Sun; Yi Liu
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2021-05-13       Impact factor: 11.556

5.  Stable Frank-Kasper phases of self-assembled, soft matter spheres.

Authors:  Abhiram Reddy; Michael B Buckley; Akash Arora; Frank S Bates; Kevin D Dorfman; Gregory M Grason
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-09-24       Impact factor: 11.205

  5 in total

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