Controlling Self-Assembly of Gold Nanoparticles in Block Copolymer Templates

ORAL

Abstract

Self assembly of inorganic nanoparticles within a block copolymer offers a way to produce materials with unique optical, electronic and magnetic properties. To reveal some of the fundamentals of the self assembly we have investigated the system consisting of symmetric polystyrene-poly(2-vinylpyridine) (PS-P2VP) whose total molecular weight (M$_{n})$ is 197 kg/mol and polymer-coated gold nanoparticles. Gold nanoparticles are stabilized by carrying out their synthesis in mixtures of thiol terminated PS (PS-SH) and P2VP (P2VP-SH) chains whose M$_{n}$ is 1.3 kg/mol. The surface of these particles is tailored by changing the ratio of PS-SH to P2VP-SH on their surface. While PS coated gold nanoparticles are observed to locate near the center of PS domain, gold nanoparticles coated with a 1:1 mol ratio of PS-SH to P2VP-SH are segregated at the intermaterial dividing surface (IMDS) of PS-P2VP. The particle location (the center of PS domain, the IMDS of PS-P2VP chains, the center of P2VP domain) depends on the ratio of PS to P2VP on the gold surface. The range of ratios of the PS to P2VP where gold particles segregate to the IMDS is extremely broad, raising interesting questions about the spatial distribution of PS and P2VP on the gold surface.

Authors

  • Bumjoon Kim

  • Julia J. Chiu

  • David Pine

    Departments of Chemical Engineering and Materials, UC Santa Barbara

  • Edward Kramer

    UCSB, MRL, UCSB, CA 93106, U.S.A., University of California at Santa Barbara, University of California Santa Barbara, Materials Department and MC-CAM, UCSB, Materials Department, UCSB