TY - JOUR
T1 - Controlled armoring of metal surfaces with metallodielectric patchy particles
AU - Noguchi, Tomohiro G.
AU - Iwashita, Yasutaka
AU - Kimura, Yasuyuki
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Center of Advanced Instrumental Analysis, Kyushu University, for scanning electron microscope observations. T.G.N. acknowledges financial support from QREC Academic Challenge 2013, and Y.I. acknowledges the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI under Grant Nos. 25870493 and 16K14463 and Iketani Science and Technology Foundation. We thank Natasha Lundin, Ph.D., from Edanz Group (www.edanzediting.com/ac) for editing a draft of this manuscript.
PY - 2019/5/7
Y1 - 2019/5/7
N2 - A patchy colloidal particle possesses distinctive regions with different physical or chemical properties on its surface and thus exhibits anisotropic interactions with another particle or object. By utilizing the large van der Waals attraction between metal surfaces and the electric double layer repulsion originating from surface charge, we succeeded in controlling the adsorption behavior of metallodielectric particles (MDPs), which were composed of dielectric spheres each with a thin gold patch modified with dissociable groups, to gold surfaces. When MDPs were dispersed on a dielectric substrate with a thick gold pattern in aqueous solution, the particles selectively adsorbed onto the gold surface of the substrate at a moderate salt concentration. Furthermore, when MDPs were mixed with large particles coated with a thick gold film, MDPs adsorbed on the gold surface at a moderate salt concentration and formed a monolayer. In the monolayer, gold patches of MDPs bonded to the gold surface and the dielectric surface of MDPs faced outward. In other words, this monolayer was a solid dielectric layer formed on the metal surface of a large particle. Such selectivity, i.e., that a gold patch of an MDP bonded to a gold surface but the patches did not bond to each other, was realized by controlling the thickness and surface charge of gold patches.
AB - A patchy colloidal particle possesses distinctive regions with different physical or chemical properties on its surface and thus exhibits anisotropic interactions with another particle or object. By utilizing the large van der Waals attraction between metal surfaces and the electric double layer repulsion originating from surface charge, we succeeded in controlling the adsorption behavior of metallodielectric particles (MDPs), which were composed of dielectric spheres each with a thin gold patch modified with dissociable groups, to gold surfaces. When MDPs were dispersed on a dielectric substrate with a thick gold pattern in aqueous solution, the particles selectively adsorbed onto the gold surface of the substrate at a moderate salt concentration. Furthermore, when MDPs were mixed with large particles coated with a thick gold film, MDPs adsorbed on the gold surface at a moderate salt concentration and formed a monolayer. In the monolayer, gold patches of MDPs bonded to the gold surface and the dielectric surface of MDPs faced outward. In other words, this monolayer was a solid dielectric layer formed on the metal surface of a large particle. Such selectivity, i.e., that a gold patch of an MDP bonded to a gold surface but the patches did not bond to each other, was realized by controlling the thickness and surface charge of gold patches.
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U2 - 10.1063/1.5090440
DO - 10.1063/1.5090440
M3 - Article
C2 - 31067877
AN - SCOPUS:85065498031
SN - 0021-9606
VL - 150
JO - Journal of Chemical Physics
JF - Journal of Chemical Physics
IS - 17
M1 - 174903
ER -