2008 Annual Meeting
(245c) Two-Dimensional Assembly of Aqueous Colloidal Metallic Nanowires at Surfaces
Authors
In an effort to understand assembly in this system and ultimately exercise control over it, we use canonical Monte Carlo (MC) simulations to model the ordering of the wires on the substrate. We account for van der Waals and electrostatic interactions between the wires. The MC simulations correctly reproduce the experimentally observed ordering and demonstrate that the preference for alignment of the Au ends stems from differences between the Hamaker constants for Au and Ag. We study how general differences between the Hamaker constants of the two materials, as well as differences in the zeta potentials can alter the value of the order parameter. We show that the propensity of the wires to exhibit a smectic vs. a nematic phase is governed by a balance between van der Waals attraction and electrostatic repulsion. If the zeta potential is sufficiently weak, van der Waals attraction leads to a smectic phase, as is observed experimentally. On the other hand, if the zeta potential is sufficiently strong, a nematic phase is predicted that mitigates electrostatic repulsion. The ordering of the nanowires is also shown to depend on their density and length.