| Literature DB >> 30889948 |
Hua Zhu1, Zhaochuan Fan2, Long Yu3, Mitchell A Wilson2, Yasutaka Nagaoka1, Dennis Eggert4,5, Can Cao1, Yuzi Liu6, Zichao Wei7, Xudong Wang7, Jie He7, Jing Zhao7, Ruipeng Li8, Zhongwu Wang9, Michael Grünwald2, Ou Chen1.
Abstract
Self-assembly of nanocrystals is a promising route for creating macroscale materials that derive function from the properties of their nanoscale building blocks. While much progress has been made assembling nanocrystals into different superlattices, controlling the relative orientations of nanocrystals in those lattices remains a challenge. Here, we combine experiments with computer simulations to study the self-assembly of patchy heterostructural nanocrystals (HNCs), consisting of near-spherical quantum dots decorated with regular arrangements of small gold satellites, into close-packed superlattices with pronounced orientational alignment of HNCs. Our simulations indicate that the orientational alignment is caused by van der Waals interactions between gold patches and is sensitive to the interparticle distance in the superlattice. We demonstrate experimentally that the degree and type of orientational alignment can be controlled by changing ligand populations on HNCs. This study provides guidance for the design and fabrication of nanocrystal superlattices with enhanced structural control.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30889948 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b01033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419