2008 Annual Meeting

(465g) Aggregation Kinetics of Colloidal Particles Measured by Gas-Phase Differential Mobility Analysis

Authors

Michael R Zachariah - Presenter, University of Maryland
De-Hao Tsai, University of Maryland and NIST
Leonard F. Pease, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Rebecca A. Zangmeister, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Michael J. Tarlov, National Institute of Standards and Technology
We demonstrate the utility of electrospray gas phase ion-mobility analysis as a new method to investigate nanoparticle flocculation, or aggregation. Au nanoparticle (Au-NP) solutions were sampled via electrospray (ES), followed by differential ion-mobility analysis (DMA) to determine the particle mobility distribution. Multimodal size distributions obtained with ES-DMA indicated the presence of single Au-NPs (monomer) as well as larger Au-NP clusters such as dimers, trimers, and tetramers under specific solution conditions. The fraction of each aggregate species as a function of time was quantitatively characterized from which the degree of aggregation, aggregation rate, and stability ratio at different ionic strengths was determined. The latter enabled extraction of a surface potential (or surface charge density) of 64 ± 2 mV for 10 nm Au-NPs, which is in good agreement with values obtained from other methods, thus validating our approach. Our results show that ES-DMA is a valuable tool to quantitatively probe the early stages of colloidal aggregation or as a preparatory tool for size election of aggregates.