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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 2024 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38622048

ABSTRACT

In supramolecular materials, multiple weak binding groups can act as a single collective unit when confined to a localized volume, thereby producing strong but dynamic bonds between material building blocks. This principle of multivalency provides a versatile means of controlling material assembly, as both the number and the type of supramolecular moieties become design handles to modulate the strength of intermolecular interactions. However, in materials with building blocks significantly larger than individual supramolecular moieties (e.g., polymer or nanoparticle scaffolds), the degree of multivalency is difficult to predict or control, as sufficiently large scaffolds inherently preclude separated supramolecular moieties from interacting. Because molecular models commonly used to examine supramolecular interactions are intrinsically unable to examine any trends or emergent behaviors that arise due to nanoscale scaffold geometry, our understanding of the thermodynamics of these massively multivalent systems remains limited. Here we address this challenge via the coassembly of polymer-grafted nanoparticles and multivalent polymers, systematically examining how multivalent scaffold size, shape, and spacing affect their collective thermodynamics. Investigating the interplay of polymer structure and supramolecular group stoichiometry reveals complicated but rationally describable trends that demonstrate how the supramolecular scaffold design can modulate the strength of multivalent interactions. This approach to self-assembled supramolecular materials thus allows for the manipulation of polymer-nanoparticle composites with controlled thermal stability, nanoparticle organization, and tailored meso- to microscopic structures. The sophisticated control of multivalent thermodynamics through precise modulation of the nanoscale scaffold geometry represents a significant advance in the ability to rationally design complex hierarchically structured materials via self-assembly.

2.
ACS Nano ; 17(21): 22121-22128, 2023 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37921570

ABSTRACT

Colloidal crystallization provides a means to synthesize hierarchical nanostructures by design and to use these complex structures for nanodevice fabrication. In particular, DNA provides a means to program interactions between particles with high specificity, thereby enabling the formation of particle superlattice crystallites with tailored unit cell geometries and surface faceting. However, while DNA provides precise control of particle-particle bonding interactions, it does not inherently present a means of controlling higher-level structural features such as the size, shape, position, or orientation of a colloidal crystallite. While altering assembly parameters such as temperature or concentration can enable limited control of crystallite size and geometry, integrating colloidal assemblies into nanodevices requires better tools to manipulate higher-order structuring and improved understanding of how these tools control the fundamental kinetics and mechanisms of colloidal crystal growth. In this work, photolithography is used to produce patterned substrates that can manipulate the placement, size, dispersity, and orientation of colloidal crystals. By adjusting aspects of the pattern, such as feature size and separation, we reveal a diffusion-limited mechanism governing crystal nucleation and growth. Leveraging this insight, patterns are designed that can produce wafer-scale substrates with arrays of nanoparticle superlattices of uniform size and shape. These design principles therefore bridge a gap between a fundamental understanding of nanoparticle assembly and the fabrication of nanostructures compatible with functional devices.

3.
Sci Adv ; 9(32): eadh8508, 2023 08 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37566651

ABSTRACT

Scalable fabrication of two-dimensional (2D) arrays of quantum dots (QDs) and quantum rods (QRs) with nanoscale precision is required for numerous device applications. However, self-assembly-based fabrication of such arrays using DNA origami typically suffers from low yield due to inefficient QD and QR DNA functionalization. In addition, it is challenging to organize solution-assembled DNA origami arrays on 2D device substrates while maintaining their structural fidelity. Here, we reduced manufacturing time from a few days to a few minutes by preparing high-density DNA-conjugated QDs/QRs from organic solution using a dehydration and rehydration process. We used a surface-assisted large-scale assembly (SALSA) method to construct 2D origami lattices directly on solid substrates to template QD and QR 2D arrays with orientational control, with overall loading yields exceeding 90%. Our fabrication approach enables the scalable, high fidelity manufacturing of 2D addressable QDs and QRs with nanoscale orientational and spacing control for functional 2D photonic devices.


Subject(s)
Quantum Dots , Quantum Dots/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
4.
Acc Chem Res ; 56(14): 1931-1941, 2023 Jul 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37390490

ABSTRACT

ConspectusColloidal nanoparticles have unique attributes that can be used to synthesize materials with exotic properties, but leveraging these properties requires fine control over the particles' interactions with one another and their surrounding environment. Small molecules adsorbed on a nanoparticle's surface have traditionally served as ligands to govern these interactions, providing a means of ensuring colloidal stability and dictating the particles' assembly behavior. Alternatively, nanoscience is increasingly interested in instead using macromolecular ligands that form well-defined polymer brushes, as these brushes provide a much more tailorable surface ligand with significantly greater versatility in both composition and ligand size. While initial research in this area is promising, synthesizing macromolecules that can appropriately form brush architectures remains a barrier to their more widespread use and limits understanding of the fundamental chemical and physical principles that influence brush-grafted particles' ability to form functional materials. Therefore, enhancing the capabilities of polymer-grafted nanoparticles as tools for materials synthesis requires a multidisciplinary effort, with specific focus on both developing new synthetic routes to polymer-brush-coated nanoparticles and investigating the structure-property relationships the brush enables.In this Account, we describe our recent work in developing polymer brush coatings for nanoparticles, which we use to modulate particle behavior on demand, select specific nanoscopic architectures to form, and bolster traditional bulk polymers to form stronger materials by design. Distinguished by the polymer type and capabilities, three classes of nanoparticles are discussed here: nanocomposite tectons (NCTs), which use synthetic polymers end-functionalized with supramolecular recognition groups capable of directing their assembly; programmable atom equivalents (PAEs) containing brushes of synthetic DNA that employ Watson-Crick base pairing to encode particle binding interactions; and cross-linkable nanoparticles (XNPs) that can both stabilize nanoparticles in solution and polymer matrices and subsequently form multivalent cross-links to strengthen polymer composites. We describe the formation of these brushes through "grafting-from" and "grafting-to" strategies and illustrate aspects that are important for future advancement. We also examine the new capabilities brushes provide, looking closely at dynamic polymer processes that provide control over the assembly state of particles. Finally, we provide a brief overview of the technological applications of nanoparticles with polymer brushes, focusing on the integration of nanoparticles into traditional materials and the processing of nanoparticles into bulk solids.

5.
Nano Lett ; 23(11): 5155-5163, 2023 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37216440

ABSTRACT

Self-assembled nanoparticle superlattices (NPSLs) are an emergent class of self-architected nanocomposite materials that possess promising properties arising from precise nanoparticle ordering. Their multiple coupled properties make them desirable as functional components in devices where mechanical robustness is critical. However, questions remain about NPSL mechanical properties and how shaping them affects their mechanical response. Here, we perform in situ nanomechanical experiments that evidence up to an 11-fold increase in stiffness (∼1.49 to 16.9 GPa) and a 5-fold increase in strength (∼88 to 426 MPa) because of surface stiffening/strengthening from shaping these nanomaterials via focused-ion-beam milling. To predict the mechanical properties of shaped NPSLs, we present discrete element method (DEM) simulations and an analytical core-shell model that capture the FIB-induced stiffening response. This work presents a route for tunable mechanical responses of self-architected NPSLs and provides two frameworks to predict their mechanical response and guide the design of future NPSL-containing devices.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(11): 6051-6056, 2023 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36898204

ABSTRACT

Nanocomposite tectons (NCTs), polymer brush-grafted nanoparticles that use supramolecular interactions to drive their assembly, form ordered nanoparticle superlattices (NPSLs) with well-defined unit cell symmetries when thermally annealed. In this work, we demonstrate that appropriate assembly and processing conditions can also enable control over the microstructure of NCT lattices by balancing the enthalpic and entropic factors associated with ligand packing and supramolecular bonding during crystallization. Unary systems of NCTs are assembled via the addition of a small molecule capable of binding to multiple nanoparticle ligands; these NCTs initially form face-centered-cubic (FCC) structures in solvents that are favorable for the particles' polymer brushes. However, the FCC lattices undergo a reversible, diffusionless phase transition to body-centered-cubic (BCC) lattices when transferred to a solvent that induces polymer brush collapse. The BCC superlattices maintain the same crystal habit as the parent FCC phase but exhibit significant transformation twinning similar to that seen in martensitic alloys. This previously unseen diffusionless phase transformation in NPSLs enables unique microstructural features in the resulting assemblies, suggesting that NPSLs could serve as models for the investigation of microstructural evolution in crystalline systems and extend our understanding of NPSLs as atomic material analogues.

7.
J Chem Phys ; 158(6): 064901, 2023 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36792494

ABSTRACT

The self-assembly of colloidal nanoparticles into ordered superlattices typically uses dynamic interactions to govern particle crystallization, as these non-permanent bonds prevent the formation of kinetically trapped, disordered aggregates. However, while the use of reversible bonding is critical in the formation of highly ordered particle arrangements, dynamic interactions also inherently make the structures more prone to disassembly or disruption when subjected to different environmental stimuli. Thus, there is typically a trade-off between the ability to initially form an ordered colloidal material and the ability of that material to retain its order under different conditions. Here, we present a method for embedding colloidal nanoparticle superlattices into a polymer gel matrix. This encapsulation strategy physically prevents the nanoparticles from dissociating upon heating, drying, or the introduction of chemicals that would normally disrupt the lattice. However, the use of a gel as the embedding medium still permits further modification of the colloidal nanoparticle lattice by introducing stimuli that deform the gel network (as this deformation in turn alters the nanoparticle lattice structure in a predictable manner). Moreover, encapsulation of the lattice within a gel permits further stabilization into fully solid materials by removing the solvent from the gel or by replacing the solvent with a liquid monomer that can be photopolymerized. This embedding method therefore makes it possible to incorporate ordered colloidal arrays into a polymer matrix as either dynamic or static structures, expanding their potential for use in responsive materials.

8.
ACS Nano ; 17(4): 3394-3400, 2023 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36752596

ABSTRACT

Micromirrors are used in integrated photonics to couple extraplanar light into the planar structure of a device by redirecting light via specular reflection. Compared with grating or prism-based couplers, micromirrors allow for coupling of light over a broader range of wavelengths, provided that the micromirror is fabricated with a specific 3D shape to ensure proper reflection angles. In principle, self-assembly methods could enable reliable, parallelizable fabrication of such devices with a high degree of precision by designing self-assembling components that produce the desired microscale geometry as their thermodynamic products. In this work, we use DNA-functionalized nanoparticles to assemble faceted crystallites with predetermined crystal shapes, and demonstrate with microscale retroreflectance measurements that these self-assembled nanoparticle arrays do indeed behave like optically flat mirrors. Furthermore, we show that the tilt angle of the micromirrors can be intentionally controlled by altering the crystallographic symmetry and preferred crystal orientations as a function of the self-assembly process, thereby altering the resulting specular angle in a programmable manner. Measurements of optical coupling from normal incidence into the substrate plane via an optical fiber confirm that the faceted structures can function as optical out-of-plane coupling devices, and coating these structures with reflective materials allows for high efficiency of light reflection in addition to the angular control. Together, these experiments demonstrate how self-assembled nanoparticle materials can be used to generate optically relevant architectures, enabling a significant step in the development of self-assembly as a materials fabrication tool for integrated optical devices.

9.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(18): 21535-21543, 2022 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35500102

ABSTRACT

The distribution of filler particles within a polymer matrix nanocomposite has a profound influence on the properties and processability of the material. While filler aggregation and percolation can significantly enhance particular functionalities such as thermal and electrical conductivity, the formation of larger filler clusters and networks can also impair mechanical properties like strength and toughness and can also increase the difficulty of processing. Here, a strategy is presented for the preparation of functional composites that enhance thermal conductivity over polymer alone, without negatively affecting mechanical performance or processability. Thermal cross-linking of self-suspended polymer grafted nanoparticles is used to prepare highly filled (>50 vol %) macroscopic nanocomposites with homogeneously dispersed, non-percolating alumina particles in an organic matrix. The initial composites use low glass transition temperature polymer grafts and thus are flexible and easily shaped by thermoforming methods. However, after thermal aging, the resulting materials display high stiffness (>10 GPa) and enhanced thermal conductivity (>100% increase) and also possess mechanical strength similar to commodity plastics. Moreover, the covalent bonding between matrix and filler allows for the significant elevation of thermal conductivity despite the extensive interfacial area in the nanocomposite. The thermal aging of polymer grafted nanoparticles is therefore a promising method for producing easily processable, mechanically sturdy, and macroscopic nanocomposites with improved thermal conductivity.

10.
Soft Matter ; 18(19): 3644-3648, 2022 May 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35527518

ABSTRACT

Herein, we report a design strategy for developing mechanically enhanced and dynamic polymer networks by incorporating a polymer with multivalent brush architecture. Different ratios of two types of imidazole functionalized polymers, specifically poly(n-butyl acrylate) (PnBA) and poly(poly(n-butyl acrylate)) (PPnBA) were blended with Zn(II) ions, thereby forming a series of elastomers with consistent composition but varying network topologies. As the weight fraction of PPnBA increased, the melting temperature, plateau modulus, and relaxation time of the melt increased because of the increase in the crosslinking density and coordination efficiency. Remarkably, however, the activation energy of the flow, Ea, decreased with increasing amounts of PPnBA despite the observed increases in mechanical properties. This unique behavior is attributed to the multivalent nature of the brush polymer, which allows the PPnBA to generate a higher crosslinking density than networks of linear PnBA, even though the brush polymers contain a lower weight fraction of the imidazole crosslinks. This method of lowering Ea, while improving the mechanical properties of the elastomers has great potential in the development of various soft materials such as self-healing or 3D-printable elastomeric structures.

11.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(8): 3330-3346, 2022 03 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35171596

ABSTRACT

Nanoparticle assembly is a complex and versatile method of generating new materials, capable of using thousands of different combinations of particle size, shape, composition, and ligand chemistry to generate a library of unique structures. Here, a history of particle self-assembly as a strategy for materials discovery is presented, focusing on key advances in both synthesis and measurement of emergent properties to describe the current state of the field. Several key challenges for further advancement of nanoparticle assembly are also outlined, establishing a roadmap of critical research areas to enable the next generation of nanoparticle-based materials synthesis.


Subject(s)
Nanoparticles , Ligands , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Particle Size
12.
Soft Matter ; 18(11): 2176-2192, 2022 Mar 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35212698

ABSTRACT

Nanocomposite tectons (NCTs) are nanocomposite building blocks consisting of nanoparticle cores functionalized with a polymer brush, where each polymer chain terminates in a supramolecular recognition group capable of driving particle assembly. Like other ligand-driven nanoparticle assembly schemes (for example those using DNA-hybridization or solvent evaporation), NCTs are able to make colloidal crystal structures with precise particle organization in three dimensions. However, despite the similarity of NCT assembly to other methods of engineering ordered particle arrays, the crystallographic symmetries of assembled NCTs are significantly different. In this study, we provide a detailed characterization of the dynamics of hybridizations through universal (independent of microscopic details) parameters. We perform rigorous free energy calculations and identify the persistence length of the ligand as the critical parameter accounting for the differences in the phase diagrams of NCTs and other assembly methods driven by hydrogen bond hybridizations. We also report new experiments to provide direct verification for the predictions. We conclude by discussing the role of non-equilibrium effects and illustrating how NCTs provide a unification of the two most successful strategies for nanoparticle assembly: solvent evaporation and DNA programmable assembly.


Subject(s)
Nanocomposites , Nanoparticles , Crystallography , DNA/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Hybridization
13.
Nano Lett ; 21(18): 7432-7434, 2021 09 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34478312

Subject(s)
Nanoparticles
14.
Br J Hosp Med (Lond) ; 82(8): 1-10, 2021 Aug 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34431339

ABSTRACT

The upper limb consists of four major parts: a girdle formed by the clavicle and scapula, the arm, the forearm and the hand. Peripheral nerve lesions of the upper limb are divided into lesions of the brachial plexus or the nerves arising from it. Lesions of the nerves arising from the brachial plexus are further divided into upper (proximal) or lower (distal) lesions based on their location. Peripheral nerves in the forearm can be compressed in various locations and by a wide range of pathologies. A thorough understanding of the anatomy and clinical presentations of these compression neuropathies can lead to prompt diagnosis and management, preventing possible permanent damage. This article discusses the aetiology, anatomy, clinical presentation and surgical management of compressive neuropathies of the upper limb.


Subject(s)
Brachial Plexus Neuropathies , Brachial Plexus , Brachial Plexus Neuropathies/diagnosis , Brachial Plexus Neuropathies/etiology , Brachial Plexus Neuropathies/therapy , Forearm , Hand , Humans , Upper Extremity
15.
Small ; 17(36): e2102107, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34319651

ABSTRACT

Polymer nanocomposites are made by combining a nanoscale filler with a polymer matrix, where polymer-particle interactions can enhance matrix properties and introduce behaviors distinct from either component. Manipulating particle organization within a composite potentially allows for better control over polymer-particle interactions, and the formation of ordered arrays can introduce new, emergent properties not observed in random composites. However, self-assembly of ordered particle arrays typically requires weak interparticle interactions to prevent kinetic traps, making these assemblies incompatible with most conventional processing techniques. As a result, more fundamental investigations are needed into methods to provide additional stability to these lattices without disrupting their internal organization. The authors show that the addition of free polymer chains to the assembly solution is a simple means to increase the stability of nanoparticle superlattices against thermal dissociation. By adding high concentrations (>50 mg mL-1 ) of free polymer to nanoparticle superlattices, it is possible to significantly elevate their thermal stability without adversely affecting ordering. Moreover, polymer topology, molecular weight, and concentration can also be used as independent design handles to tune this behavior. Collectively, this work allows for a wider range of processing conditions for generating future nanocomposites with complete control over particle organization within the material.


Subject(s)
Nanocomposites , Nanoparticles , Polymers
16.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 8(16): e2100968, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34151547

ABSTRACT

Brush polymers have emerged as components of novel materials that show huge potential in multiple disciplines and applications, including self-assembling photonic crystals, drug delivery vectors, biomimetic lubricants, and ultrasoft elastomers. However, an understanding of how this unique topology can affect the properties of highly solvated materials like hydrogels remain under investigated. Here, it is investigated how the high functionality and large overall size of brush polymers enhances the gelation kinetics of low polymer weight percent gels, enabling 100-fold faster gelation rates and 15-fold higher stiffness values than gels crosslinked by traditional star polymers of the same composition and polymer chain length. This work demonstrates that brush polymer topology provides a useful means to control gelation kinetics without the need to manipulate polymer composition or crosslinking chemistry. The unique architecture of brush polymers also results in restrained or even nonswelling behavior at different temperatures, regardless of the polymer concentration. Brush polymers therefore are an interesting tool for examining how high-functionality polymer building blocks can affect structure-property relationships and chemical kinetics in hydrogel materials, and also provide a useful rapidly-setting hydrogel platform with tunable properties and great potential for multiple material applications.

17.
Nature ; 591(7851): 586-591, 2021 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33762767

ABSTRACT

Nanoparticle assembly has been proposed as an ideal means to program the hierarchical organization of a material by using a selection of nanoscale components to build the entire material from the bottom up. Multiscale structural control is highly desirable because chemical composition, nanoscale ordering, microstructure and macroscopic form all affect physical properties1,2. However, the chemical interactions that typically dictate nanoparticle ordering3-5 do not inherently provide any means to manipulate structure at larger length scales6-9. Nanoparticle-based materials development therefore requires processing strategies to tailor micro- and macrostructure without sacrificing their self-assembled nanoscale arrangements. Here we demonstrate methods to rapidly assemble gram-scale quantities of faceted nanoparticle superlattice crystallites that can be further shaped into macroscopic objects in a manner analogous to the sintering of bulk solids. The key advance of this method is that the chemical interactions that govern nanoparticle assembly remain active during the subsequent processing steps, which enables the local nanoscale ordering of the particles to be preserved as the macroscopic materials are formed. The nano- and microstructure of the bulk solids can be tuned as a function of the size, chemical makeup and crystallographic symmetry of the superlattice crystallites, and the micro- and macrostructures can be controlled via subsequent processing steps. This work therefore provides a versatile method to simultaneously control structural organization across the molecular to macroscopic length scales.

18.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(9): 11215-11223, 2021 Mar 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33645965

ABSTRACT

DNA is a powerful tool for programming the three-dimensional organization of nanomaterials, where the specificity of nucleotide base-pairing can enable precise, complex, and dynamically addressable structures like colloidal crystals. However, because these DNA-programmed materials are often only stable in solution, their organization can be easily disrupted by changes to its local environment. Methods to stabilize these materials have been developed, but often come at the expense of altering or permanently fixing the materials' structures, removing many of the benefits of using DNA interactions to program assembly. Thus, these methods limit the application of DNA-assembled structures as dynamic and programmable material components. Here, a method is presented to resolve these drawbacks for DNA-grafted nanoparticles, also known as Programmable Atom Equivalents (PAEs), by embedding assembled lattices within a hydrogel matrix. The preformed lattices are exposed to polymerizable residues that electrostatically bind to the charged backbone of the DNA ligands and form a continuous, permeating gel network that stabilizes the colloidal crystals upon introduction of a radical initiator. After embedding PAEs in a hydrogel, deformation of the macroscopic matrix results in concomitant deformation of the PAE lattices, allowing superlattice structural changes to be induced by chemical methods (such as changing solute concentration to alter swelling pressure) or by application of mechanical strain. Changes to the structure of the PAE lattices are reversible and repeatable over multiple cycles and can be either isotropic (such as by swelling) or anisotropic (such as by mechanical deformation). This method of embedding nanoparticle crystals inside of a flexible and environmentally responsive hydrogel is therefore a useful tool in extending the utility of PAEs and other micro- and nanostructures assembled with DNA.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Hydrogels/chemistry , Polyelectrolytes/chemistry , Crystallization , Ethylamines/chemistry , Gold/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Polymethacrylic Acids/chemistry , Static Electricity
19.
Nanoscale ; 13(2): 426-443, 2021 Jan 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33367442

ABSTRACT

Polymer nanocomposites containing nanoscale fillers are an important class of materials due to their ability to access a wide variety of properties as a function of their composition. In order to take full advantage of these properties, it is critical to control the distribution of nanofillers within the parent polymer matrix, as this structural organization affects how the two constituent components interact with one another. In particular, new methods for generating ordered arrays of nanofillers represent a key underexplored research area, as emergent properties arising from nanoscale ordering can be used to introduce novel functionality currently inaccessible in random composites. The knowledge gained from developing such methods will provide important insight into the thermodynamics and kinetics associated with nanomaterial and polymer assembly. These insights will not only benefit researchers working on new composite materials, but will also deepen our understanding of soft matter systems in general. In this review, we summarize contemporary research efforts in manipulating nanofiller organization in polymer nanocomposites and highlight future challenges and opportunities for constructing ordered nanocomposite materials.

20.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(45): 19181-19188, 2020 11 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33140957

ABSTRACT

Nanoparticle superlattice assembly has been proposed as an ideal means of programming material properties as a function of hierarchical organization of different building blocks. While many investigations have focused on electromagnetic, optical, and transport behaviors, nanoscale self-assembly via supramolecular interactions is also a potentially desirable method to program material mechanical behavior, as it allows the strength and three-dimensional organization of chemical bonds to be used as handles to manipulate how a material responds to external stress. DNA-grafted nanoparticles are a particularly promising building block for such hierarchically organized materials because of DNA's tunable and nucleobase sequence-specific complementary binding. Using nanoindentation, we show here that the programmability of oligonucleotide interactions allows the modulus of DNA-grafted nanoparticle superlattices to be easily tuned overly nearly 2 orders of magnitude. Additionally, we demonstrate that alterations to the supramolecular bond strength between particles can alter how a lattice deforms under applied mechanical force. As a result, the superlattices can be programmed either to reorganize their internal structures to dissipate mechanical energy or to completely recover their initial structure upon relaxation, independently of how the particles are arranged in 3D space. These behaviors are subsequently explained as a function of the hierarchical structure of the DNA-guided assemblies by using a simple truss-structure model. Altering the supramolecular DNA connections between particles therefore provides a simple and rational means of dictating different aspects of material mechanical response to produce tailorable properties that are not typically observed in conventional bulk materials. Ultimately, these studies enable control over the deformation behavior of future DNA-assembled nanomaterials and provide evidence that supramolecular chemistry is an effective tool in controlling the mechanical properties of nanomaterials as a function of their hierarchical design.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Elastic Modulus , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Particle Size
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