2006 AIChE Annual Meeting

(391g) Electrostatic Self-Assembly of Binary Nanocrystals with a Diamond-like Lattice

Authors

Bartosz A. Grzybowski - Presenter, Northwestern University
Alexander M. Kalsin, Northwestern University
Marcin Fialkowski, Northwestern University
Maciej Paszewski, Northwestern University
Stoyan K. Smoukov, Northwestern University
Kyle J. M. Bishop, Northwestern University
Self-assembly of charged, equally sized metal nanoparticles of two types (gold and silver) leads to the formation of large, sphalerite (diamond-like) crystals, in which each nanoparticle has four oppositely charged neighbors. Formation of these non–close-packed structures is a consequence of electrostatic effects specific to the nanoscale, where the thickness of the screening layer is commensurate with the dimensions of the assembling objects. Because of electrostatic stabilization of larger crystallizing particles by smaller ones, better-quality crystals can be obtained from more polydisperse nanoparticle solutions.