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Gold nanoparticle ring arrays from core-satellite nanostructures made to order by hydrogen bond interactions.


ABSTRACT: Polyethylene glycol-grafted gold nanoparticles are attached to silica nanoparticle cores via hydrogen bonding in a controlled fashion, forming well-defined core-satellite structures in colloidal solution. For separating these complex structures effectively from the parental nanoparticles, a straightforward and easy protocol using glass beads has been developed. The attached gold nanoparticles show unique surface mobility on the silica core surface, which allows for nanoparticle rearrangement into a 2D ring pattern surrounding the silica nanoparticle template when the core-satellite structures are cast to a planar surface. When etching away the silica core under conditions in which the polymer shell fixes the satellites to the substrate, highly ordered ring-shaped patterns of gold nanoparticles are formed. By variation of the size of the parental particles - 13 to 28 nm for gold nanoparticles and 39 to 62 nm for silica nanoparticles - a great library of different ring-structures regarding size and particle number is accessible with relative ease. The proposed protocol is low-cost and can easily be scaled up. It moreover demonstrates the power of hydrogen bonds in polymers as a dynamic anchoring tool for creating nanoclusters with rearrangement ability. We believe that this concept constitutes a powerful strategy for the development of new and innovative nanostructures.

SUBMITTER: Cai Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9417049 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Gold nanoparticle ring arrays from core-satellite nanostructures made to order by hydrogen bond interactions.

Cai Yingying Y   Peng Wentao W   Vana Philipp P  

Nanoscale advances 20220423 13


Polyethylene glycol-grafted gold nanoparticles are attached to silica nanoparticle cores <i>via</i> hydrogen bonding in a controlled fashion, forming well-defined core-satellite structures in colloidal solution. For separating these complex structures effectively from the parental nanoparticles, a straightforward and easy protocol using glass beads has been developed. The attached gold nanoparticles show unique surface mobility on the silica core surface, which allows for nanoparticle rearrangem  ...[more]

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