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1.
J Appl Crystallogr ; 57(Pt 3): 714-727, 2024 Jun 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38846761

The capillary wave model of a liquid surface predicts both the X-ray specular reflection and the diffuse scattering around it. A quantitative method is presented to obtain the X-ray reflectivity (XRR) from a liquid surface through the diffuse scattering data around the specular reflection measured using a grazing incidence X-ray off-specular scattering (GIXOS) geometry at a fixed horizontal offset angle with respect to the plane of incidence. With this approach the entire Qz -dependent reflectivity profile can be obtained at a single, fixed incident angle. This permits a much faster acquisition of the profile than with conventional reflectometry, where the incident angle must be scanned point by point to obtain a Qz -dependent profile. The XRR derived from the GIXOS-measured diffuse scattering, referred to in this paper as pseudo-reflectivity, provides a larger Qz range compared with the reflectivity measured by conventional reflectometry. Transforming the GIXOS-measured diffuse scattering profile to pseudo-XRR opens up the GIXOS method to widely available specular XRR analysis software tools. Here the GIXOS-derived pseudo-XRR is compared with the XRR measured by specular reflectometry from two simple vapor-liquid interfaces at different surface tension, and from a hexadecyltri-methyl-ammonium bromide monolayer on a water surface. For the simple liquids, excellent agreement (beyond 11 orders of magnitude in signal) is found between the two methods, supporting the approach of using GIXOS-measured diffuse scattering to derive reflectivities. Pseudo-XRR obtained at different horizontal offset angles with respect to the plane of incidence yields indistinguishable results, and this supports the robustness of the GIXOS-XRR approach. The pseudo-XRR method can be extended to soft thin films on a liquid surface, and criteria are established for the applicability of the approach.

3.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 650(Pt B): 1941-1948, 2023 Nov 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37517193

HYPOTHESIS: Introducing charged terminal groups to polymers that graft nanoparticles enable Coulombic control over their assembly by tuning the pH and salinity of their aqueous suspensions. EXPERIMENTS: Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are grafted with poly (ethylene glycol) (PEG) terminated with (charge-neutral), (negatively charged) or groups (positively charged), and characterized with dynamic light scattering, ζ-potential, and thermal gravimetric analysis. Liquid surface X-ray reflectivity (XR) and grazing incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) are used to determine the density profile and in-plane structure of the AuNPs assembly at the aqueous surface. FINDINGS: Assembly of PEG-AuNPs at the liquid/vapor interface is tunable by adjusting pH or salinity for COOH but less for terminals. The distinct assembly behaviors are attributed to the overall charge of PEG-AuNPs as well as PEG conformation. COOH-PEG corona is more compact than those of the other terminal groups, leading to a crystalline structure with a smaller superlattice. The net charge per particle depends not only on the PEG terminal groups but also on the cation sequestration of PEG and the intrinsic negative charge of the AuNP surface. [1] The closeness to overall charge neutrality, and hydrogen bonding in play, brought by -PEG, drive -PEG-AuNPs to assembly and crystallinity without additives to the suspensions.

4.
Langmuir ; 38(40): 12356-12366, 2022 Oct 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36170153

The surface adsorption of ionic surfactants is fundamental for many widespread phenomena in life sciences and for a wide range of technological applications. However, direct atomic-resolution structural experimental studies of noncrystalline surface-adsorbed films are scarce. Thus, even the most central physical aspects of these films, such as their charge density, remain uncertain. Consequently, theoretical models based on contradicting assumptions as for the surface films' ionization are widely used for the description and prediction of surface thermodynamics. We employ X-ray reflectivity to obtain the Ångström-scale surface-normal structure of surface-adsorbed films of the cationic surfactant cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) in aqueous solutions at several different temperatures and concentrations. In conjunction with published neutron reflectivity data, we determine the surface-normal charge distribution due to the dissociated surfactants' headgroups. The distribution appears to be inconsistent with the Gouy-Chapman model yet consistent with a compact Stern layer model of condensed counterions. The experimental surfactant adsorption thermodynamics conforms well to classical, Langmuir and Kralchevsky, adsorption models. Furthermore, the Kralchevsky model correctly reproduces the observed condensation of counterions, allowing the values of the adsorption parameters to be resolved, based on the combination of the present data and the published surface tension measurements.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(18): 8138-8152, 2022 05 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35452210

Controlling the interfaces and interactions of colloidal nanoparticles (NPs) via tethered molecular moieties is crucial for NP applications in engineered nanomaterials, optics, catalysis, and nanomedicine. Despite a broad range of molecular types explored, there is a need for a flexible approach to rationally vary the chemistry and structure of these interfacial molecules for controlling NP stability in diverse environments, while maintaining a small size of the NP molecular shell. Here, we demonstrate that low-molecular-weight, bifunctional comb-shaped, and sequence-defined peptoids can effectively stabilize gold NPs (AuNPs). The generality of this robust functionalization strategy was also demonstrated by coating of silver, platinum, and iron oxide NPs with designed peptoids. Each peptoid (PE) is designed with varied arrangements of a multivalent AuNP-binding domain and a solvation domain consisting of oligo-ethylene glycol (EG) branches. Among designs, a peptoid (PE5) with a diblock structure is demonstrated to provide a superior nanocolloidal stability in diverse aqueous solutions while forming a compact shell (∼1.5 nm) on the AuNP surface. We demonstrate by experiments and molecular dynamics simulations that PE5-coated AuNPs (PE5/AuNPs) are stable in select organic solvents owing to the strong PE5 (amine)-Au binding and solubility of the oligo-EG motifs. At the vapor-aqueous interface, we show that PE5/AuNPs remain stable and can self-assemble into ordered 2D lattices. The NP films exhibit strong near-field plasmonic coupling when transferred to solid substrates.


Metal Nanoparticles , Nanostructures , Peptoids , Gold/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Nanostructures/chemistry , Peptoids/chemistry
6.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 13(15): 3424-3430, 2022 Apr 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35411773

We have created two-dimensional (2D) binary superlattices by cocrystallizing gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) of two distinct sizes into √3 × âˆš3 and 2 × 2 complex binary superlattices, derived from the hexagonal structures of the single components. The building blocks of these binary systems are AuNPs that are functionalized with different chain lengths of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG). The assembly of these functionalized NPs at the air-water interface is driven by the presence of salt, causing PEG-AuNPs to migrate to the aqueous surface and assemble into a crystalline lattice. We have used liquid surface X-ray reflectivity (XR) and grazing incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) to examine the assembly and crystallization at the liquid interface.

7.
Langmuir ; 37(33): 10143-10149, 2021 Aug 24.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34370486

We report on the assembly of gold nanoparticle (AuNPs) superlattices at the liquid/vapor interface and in the bulk of their suspensions. Interparticle distances in the assemblies are achieved on multiple length scales by varying chain lengths of surface grafted AuNPs by polyethylene glycol (PEG) with molecular weights in the range 2000-40,000 Da. Crystal structures and lattice constants in both 2D and 3D assemblies are determined by synchrotron-based surface-sensitive and small-angle X-ray scattering. Assuming knowledge of grafting density, we show that experimentally determined interparticle distances are adequately modeled by spherical brushes close to the θ point (Flory-Huggins parameter, χ≈12) for 2D superlattices at a liquid interface and a nonsolvent (χ = ∞) for the 3D dry superlattices.

8.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(8): 5020-5027, 2021 Feb 28.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33595568

This Comment raises several questions concerning the surface structure concluded in the paper referenced in the title. Specifically, that paper ignores previous experiments and simulations which demonstrate for the same ionic liquids depth-decaying, multilayered surface-normal density profiles rather than the claimed molecular mono- or bi-layers. We demonstrate that the claimed structure does not reproduce the measured X-ray reflectivity, which probes directly the surface-normal density profile. The measured reflectivities are found, however, to be well-reproduced by a multilayered density model. These results, and previous experimental and simulation results, cast severe doubt on the validity of the surface structure claimed in the paper referenced in the title.

9.
ACS Macro Lett ; 8(4): 352-356, 2019 Apr 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35651136

The molecular structures of polyamide barrier layers in reverse osmosis membranes, made by interfacial polymerization of m-phenylenediamine and trimesoyl chloride under different reaction and post-treatment conditions, were characterized by grazing incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering (GIWAXS). The molecular backbone packing is consistent with two different aromatic molecular packing motifs (parallel and perpendicular) with preferential surface-induced orientation. The results suggest that the perpendicular, T-shaped, packing motif (5 Å spacing) might be associated with optimal membrane permeance, compared with the parallel packings (3.5-4.0 Å spacings).

10.
Phys Rev E ; 100(6-1): 062503, 2019 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31962430

Complex fluids near interfaces or confined within nanoscale volumes can exhibit substantial shifts in physical properties compared to bulk, including glass transition temperature, phase separation, and crystallization. Because studies of these effects typically use thin film samples with one dimension of confinement, it is generally unclear how more extreme spatial confinement may influence these properties. In this work, we used x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy and gold nanoprobes to characterize polyethylene oxide confined by nanostructured gratings (<100nm width) and measured the viscosity in this nanoconfinement regime to be ∼500 times the bulk viscosity. This enhanced viscosity occurs even when the scale of confinement is several times the polymer's radius of gyration, consistent with previous reports of polymer viscosity near flat interfaces.

11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(6): E1100-E1107, 2018 02 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29358372

Interfaces of room temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) are important for both applications and basic science and are therefore intensely studied. However, the evolution of their interface structure with the cation's alkyl chain length [Formula: see text] from Coulomb to van der Waals interaction domination has not yet been studied for even a single broad homologous RTIL series. We present here such a study of the liquid-air interface for [Formula: see text], using angstrom-resolution X-ray methods. For [Formula: see text], a typical "simple liquid" monotonic surface-normal electron density profile [Formula: see text] is obtained, like those of water and organic solvents. For [Formula: see text], increasingly more pronounced nanoscale self-segregation of the molecules' charged moieties and apolar chains yields surface layering with alternating regions of headgroups and chains. The layering decays into the bulk over a few, to a few tens, of nanometers. The layering periods and decay lengths, their linear [Formula: see text] dependence, and slopes are discussed within two models, one with partial-chain interdigitation and the other with liquid-like chains. No surface-parallel long-range order is found within the surface layer. For [Formula: see text], a different surface phase is observed above melting. Our results also impact general liquid-phase issues like supramolecular self-aggregation and bulk-surface structure relations.

12.
Langmuir ; 33(5): 1305-1314, 2017 02 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28064482

Recent extensive studies reveal that surfactant-stabilized spherical alkane emulsion droplets spontaneously adopt polyhedral shapes upon cooling below a temperature Td while remaining liquid. Further cooling induces the growth of tails and spontaneous droplet splitting. Two mechanisms were offered to account for these intriguing effects. One assigns the effects to the formation of an intradroplet frame of tubules consisting of crystalline rotator phases with cylindrically curved lattice planes. The second assigns the sphere-to-polyhedron transition to the buckling of defects in a crystalline interfacial monolayer, known to form in these systems at some Ts > Td. The buckling reduces the extensional energy of the crystalline monolayer's defects, unavoidably formed when wrapping a spherical droplet by a hexagonally packed interfacial monolayer. The tail growth, shape changes, and droplet splitting were assigned to the decrease and vanishing of surface tension, γ. Here we present temperature-dependent γ(T), optical microscopy measurements, and interfacial entropy determinations for several alkane/surfactant combinations. We demonstrate the advantages and accuracy of the in situ γ(T) measurements made simultaneously with the microscopy measurements on the same droplet. The in situ and coinciding ex situ Wilhelmy plate γ(T) measurements confirm the low interfacial tension, ≲0.1 mN/m, observed at Td. Our results provide strong quantitative support validating the crystalline monolayer buckling mechanism.

13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(3): 493-6, 2016 Jan 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26733673

Liquid droplets, widely encountered in everyday life, have no flat facets. Here we show that water-dispersed oil droplets can be reversibly temperature-tuned to icosahedral and other faceted shapes, hitherto unreported for liquid droplets. These shape changes are shown to originate in the interplay between interfacial tension and the elasticity of the droplet's 2-nm-thick interfacial monolayer, which crystallizes at some T = Ts above the oil's melting point, with the droplet's bulk remaining liquid. Strikingly, at still-lower temperatures, this interfacial freezing (IF) effect also causes droplets to deform, split, and grow tails. Our findings provide deep insights into molecular-scale elasticity and allow formation of emulsions of tunable stability for directed self-assembly of complex-shaped particles and other future technologies.

14.
ACS Nano ; 8(12): 12676-81, 2014 Dec 23.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25401294

X-ray reflectivity measurements of increasingly more complex interfaces involving silicon (001) substrates reveal the existence of a thin low-density layer intruding between the single-crystalline silicon and the amorphous native SiO2 terminating it. The importance of accounting for this layer in modeling silicon/liquid interfaces and silicon-supported monolayers is demonstrated by comparing fits of the measured reflectivity curves by models including and excluding this layer. The inclusion of this layer, with 6-8 missing electrons per silicon unit cell area, consistent with one missing oxygen atom whose bonds remain hydrogen passivated, is found to be particularly important for an accurate and high-resolution determination of the surface normal density profile from reflectivities spanning extended momentum transfer ranges, now measurable at modern third-generation synchrotron sources.

15.
Langmuir ; 30(27): 8000-9, 2014 Jul 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24918482

Alkanes longer than n = 6 carbons do not spread on the water surface, but condense in a macroscopic lens. However, adding trimethylammonium-based surfactants, C(m)TAB, in submillimolar concentrations causes the alkanes to spread and form a single Langmuir-Gibbs (LG) monolayer of mixed alkanes and surfactant tails, which coexists with the alkane lenses. Upon cooling, this LG film surface-freezes at a temperature T(s) above the bulk freezing temperature T(b). The thermodynamics of surface freezing (SF) of these LG films is studied by surface tension measurements for a range of alkanes (n = 12-21) and surfactant alkyl lengths (m = 14, 16, 18), at several concentrations c. The surface freezing range T(s)-T(b) observed is up to 25 °C, an order of magnitude larger than the temperature range of SF monolayers on the surface of pure alkane melts. The measured (n,T) surface phase diagram is accounted for well by a model based on mixtures' theory, which includes an interchange energy term ω. ω is found to be negative, implying attraction between unlike species, rather than the repulsion found for SF of binary alkane mixtures. Thus, the surfactant/alkane mixing is a necessary condition for the occurrence of SF in these LG films. The X-ray derived structure of the films is presented in an accompanying paper.

16.
Langmuir ; 30(27): 8010-9, 2014 Jul 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24918630

The structure of the Langmuir-Gibbs films of normal alkanes C(n) of length n = 12-21 formed at the surface of aqueous solutions of C(m)TAB surfactants, m = 14, 16, and 18, was studied by surface-specific synchrotron X-ray methods. At high temperatures, a laterally disordered monolayer of mixed alkane molecules and surface-adsorbed surfactant tails is found, having thicknesses well below those of the alkanes' and surfactant tails' extended length. The mixed monolayer undergoes a freezing transition at a temperature T(s)(n,m), which forms, for n ≤ m + 1, a crystalline monolayer of mixed alkane molecules and surfactant tails. For n ≥ m + 2, a bilayer forms, consisting of an upper pure-alkane, crystalline monolayer and a lower liquidlike monolayer. The crystalline monolayer in both cases consists of hexagonally packed extended, surface-normal-aligned chains. The hexagonal lattice constant is found to decrease with increasing n. The films' structure is discussed in conjunction with their thermodynamic properties presented in an accompanying paper.

17.
ACS Nano ; 8(1): 243-9, 2014 Jan 28.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24341785

Nanostructured grating surfaces with groove widths less than 200 nm impose boundary conditions that frustrate the natural molecular orientational ordering within thin films of blended polymer semiconductor poly(3-hexlythiophene) and phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester, as revealed by grazing incidence X-ray scattering measurements. Polymer interactions with the grating sidewall strongly inhibit the polymer lamellar alignment parallel to the substrate typically found in planar films, in favor of alignment perpendicular to this orientation, resulting in a preferred equilibrium molecular configuration difficult to achieve by other means. Grating surfaces reduce the relative population of the parallel orientation from 30% to less than 5% in a 400 nm thick film. Analysis of in-plane X-ray scattering with respect to grating orientation shows polymer backbones highly oriented to within 10 degrees of parallel to the groove direction.

18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(17): 6663-8, 2013 Apr 23.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23553838

Crystal nucleation and growth at a liquid-liquid interface is studied on the atomic scale by in situ Å-resolution X-ray scattering methods for the case of liquid Hg and an electrochemical dilute electrolyte containing Pb(2+), F(-), and Br(-) ions. In the regime negative of the Pb amalgamation potential Φ(rp) = -0.70 V, no change is observed from the surface-layered structure of pure Hg. Upon potential-induced release of Pb(2+) from the Hg bulk at Φ > Φ(rp), the formation of an intriguing interface structure is observed, comprising a well-defined 7.6-Å-thick adlayer, decorated with structurally related 3D crystallites. Both are identified by their diffraction peaks as PbFBr, preferentially aligned with their axis along the interface normal. X-ray reflectivity shows the adlayer to consist of a stack of five ionic layers, forming a single-unit-cell-thick crystalline PbFBr precursor film, which acts as a template for the subsequent quasiepitaxial 3D crystal growth. This growth behavior is assigned to the combined action of electrostatic and short-range chemical interactions.


Crystallization/methods , Electrochemistry/methods , Electrolytes/chemistry , Mercury/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Metals/chemistry , Scattering, Radiation , Static Electricity , Synchrotrons
19.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(10): 3733-7, 2013 Mar 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23431181

The molecular-scale structure of the ionic liquid [C18mim](+)[FAP](-) near its free surface was studied by complementary methods. X-ray absorption spectroscopy and resonant soft X-ray reflectivity revealed a depth-decaying near-surface layering. Element-specific interfacial profiles were extracted with submolecular resolution from energy-dependent soft X-ray reflectivity data. Temperature-dependent hard X-ray reflectivity, small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering, and infrared spectroscopy uncovered an intriguing melting mechanism for the layered region, where alkyl chain melting drove a negative thermal expansion of the surface layer spacing.

20.
ACS Nano ; 7(3): 1990-9, 2013 Mar 26.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23294517

Surface energy has been demonstrated as a means to direct interfacial-layer composition in polymer:fullerene blends utilized as active layers in organic photovoltaic devices. Combined with recent materials advances in the preparation of nanoscale chemical patterns, surface energy control of nanophase separation presents an opportunity to employ patterned surface energy templates to control the 3D blend morphology of polymer:fullerene blends. This report details the directed assembly of poly(3-hexylthiophene):phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (P3HT:PCBM) blends atop linear grating patterns with domains of alternating high and low surface energy of 50 to 600 nm in width prepared by nanoscale oxidative lithography of alkyl-terminated self-assembled monolayers on SiO2 and SiH surfaces. Tapping-, contact-, and current-sensing AFM studies demonstrated that chemical patterns were effective at directing the 3D morphology of P3HT:PCBM blends at dimensions of >200 nm. As the dimensionality of domains approached 100 nm, the chemical patterns were no longer able to direct phase segregation, evidence that a directed spinodal decomposition mechanism was responsible for the observed morphology. Surprisingly, the low surface energy component (P3HT) was found to be atop the high surface energy domains of the template, in conflict with current understanding of the role of surface energy directed assembly in polymer blends. These results suggest that the directed spinodal decomposition mechanism applies to conjugated polymer:fullerene blends, but that additional parameters unique to these types of systems will require refinement of the theory to adequately describe and predict the behavior of these scientifically and industrially interesting materials.

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