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1.
Small ; 10(18): 3707-16, 2014 Sep 24.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24864008

The use of peptidic ligands is validated as a generic chemical platform allowing one to finely control the organization in solid phase of semiconductor nanorods originally dispersed in an aqueous media. An original method to generate, on a macroscopic scale and with the desired geometry, three-dimensional supracrystals composed of quantum rods is introduced. In a first step, nanorods are transferred in an aqueous phase thanks to the substitution of the original capping layer by peptidic ligands. Infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy data prove that the exchange is complete; fluorescence spectroscopy demonstrates that the emitter optical properties are not significantly altered; electrophoresis and dynamic light scattering experiments assess the good colloidal stability of the resulting aqueous suspension. In a second step, water evaporation in a microstructured environment yields superstructures with a chosen geometry and in which nanorods obey a smectic B arrangement, as shown by electron microscopy. Incidentally, bulk drying in a capillary tube generates a similar local order, as evidenced by small angle X-ray scattering.


Nanotechnology/methods , Peptides/chemistry , Quantum Dots , Cadmium Compounds/chemistry , Humans , Ligands , Light , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Microscopy, Electron , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Nanotubes/chemistry , Scattering, Radiation , Selenium Compounds/chemistry , Semiconductors , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Sulfides/chemistry , Water/chemistry , X-Rays
2.
ACS Nano ; 6(5): 4137-46, 2012 May 22.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22497873

We describe a method of controlled evaporation on a textured substrate for self-assembling and shaping gold-nanorod-based materials. Tridimensional wall features are formed over areas as large as several square millimeters. Furthermore, analyses by small-angle X-ray scattering and scanning electron microscopy techniques demonstrate that colloids are locally ordered as a smectic B phase. Such crystallization is in fact possible because we could finely adjust the nanoparticle charge, knowledge that additionally enables tuning the lattice parameters. In the future, the type of ordered self-assemblies of gold nanorods we have prepared could be used for amplifying optical signals.

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