首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We investigate the interparticle interactions, phase behavior, and structure of microsphere-nanoparticle mixtures that possess high size and charge asymmetry. We employ a novel Monte Carlo simulation scheme to calculate the effective microsphere interactions in suspension, yielding new insight into the origin of the experimentally observed behavior. The initial settling velocity, final sediment density, and three-dimensional structure of colloidal phases assembled from these binary mixtures via gravitational settling of silica microspheres in water and index-matched solutions exhibit a strong compositional dependence. Confocal laser scanning microscopy is used to directly image and quantify their structural evolution during assembly. Below a lower critical nanoparticle volume fraction (phi(nano) < phi(L,C)), the intrinsic van der Waals attraction between microspheres leads to the formation of colloidal gels. These gels exhibit enhanced consolidation as phi(nano) approaches phi(L,C). When phi(nano) exceeds phi(L,C), an effective repulsion arises between microspheres due to the formation of a dynamic nanoparticle halo around the colloids. From this stable fluid phase, the microspheres settle into a crystalline array. Finally, above an upper critical nanoparticle volume fraction (phi(nano) > phi(U,C)), colloidal gels form whose structure becomes more open with increasing nanoparticle concentration due to the emergence of an effective microsphere attraction, whose magnitude exhibits a superlinear dependence on phi(nano).  相似文献   

2.
The knowledge on the factors affecting the heat-induced physicochemical changes of milk proteins and milk protein stabilized oil-in-water emulsions has been advanced for the last decade. Most of the studies have emphasized on the understanding of how milk-protein-stabilized droplets and the non-adsorbed proteins determine the physicochemical and rheological properties of protein-concentrated dairy colloids. The physical stability of concentrated protein-stabilized emulsions (i.e., against creaming or phase separation/gelation after heat treatment) can be modulated by carefully controlling the colloidal properties of the protein-stabilized droplets and the non-adsorbed proteins in the aqueous phase. This article focusses on the review of the physical stability of concentrated milk protein-stabilized oil-in-water emulsions as influenced by physicochemical factors, interparticle interactions (i.e., protein–protein, and droplet–droplet interactions) and processing conditions. Emphasis has been given to the recent advances in the formation, structure and physical stability of oil-in-water emulsions prepared with all types of milk proteins, reviewing in particular the impact of pre- and post-homogenization heat treatments. In addition, the importance of common components found in the continuous phase of heat-treated nutritional emulsions that can promote aggregation (polymers, sugars, minerals) will be highlighted. Finally, the routes of manipulating the steric stabilization of these emulsions to control heat-induced aggregation—through protein–surfactant, protein–protein, protein–polysaccharide interactions and through the incorporation of protein based colloidal particles—are reviewed.  相似文献   

3.
We investigate the interparticle interactions and phase behavior of microsphere-nanoparticle mixtures of high charge asymmetry and varying size ratio. In the absence of nanoparticles, negligibly charged microspheres flocculate as a result of van der Waals interactions. Upon addition of a lower critical nanoparticle volume fraction, the microspheres are stabilized by the formation of nanoparticle halos around each microsphere. , A weak attraction between the two species leads to a pronounced enhancement of the effective nanoparticle concentration near the microsphere surface relative to the bulk solution. Above an upper critical nanoparticle volume fraction, the microspheres undergo reentrant gelation. Binary mixtures, in which the effective nanoparticle size is reduced at a fixed microsphere diameter, exhibit a narrow window of stability that ultimately disappears with increasing ionic strength. By contrast, binary mixtures of varying microsphere diameter are stabilized at similar nanoparticle volume fractions and exhibit a broader window of stability with decreasing size ratio. This unexpected observation may arise from the reduced attraction between smaller microspheres because negligible differences in nanoparticle halo formation are observed in these mixtures.  相似文献   

4.
We have developed a colloidal assembly for the study of plasmon–plasmon interactions between gold nanoparticles. Colloidal aggregates of controlled size and interparticle spacing were synthesized on silica nanoparticle substrates. Following the immobilization of isolated gold nanoparticles onto silica nanoparticles, the surfaces of the adsorbed gold nanoparticles were functionalized with 4-aminobenzenethiol. This molecular linker attached additional gold nanoparticles to the ‘parent' gold nanoparticle, forming small nanoparticle aggregates. The optical absorption spectrum of these clusters differed from that of gold colloid in a manner consistent with plasmon–plasmon interactions between the gold nanoparticles.  相似文献   

5.
This work deals with the problem of deriving theoretical connections between rheology and interparticle forces in colloidal suspensions. The nature of interparticle forces determines the colloidal structure (crystalline order due to long range repulsive forces, flocculation due to attractive forces, etc.) and hence, the flow behavior of suspensions. The aim of this article is to discuss how these interactions enter the modeling of rheometric functions, in particular, the shear viscosity. In this sense, the main interactions commonly appearing in colloids are reviewed, as well as the role they play in phase transition behavior. Then, a series of approaches relating the interaction potential to viscosity is examined. The results of applying these models to experimental data are also discussed. Finally, examples of viscosity modeling for different interaction potentials are given, by using the structural model proposed previously by the authors. The possibility of relating the flow behavior of colloidal suspensions to the interaction between particles offers new perspectives for the study and technical applications of these systems.  相似文献   

6.
We investigate the aggregation kinetics of gold nanoparticles using both experimental techniques (i.e., quasi-elastic light scattering, UV-visible spectroscopy, and transmission electron microscopy) and mathematical modeling (i.e., constant-number Monte Carlo). Aggregation of gold nanoparticles is induced by replacing the surface citrate groups with benzyl mercaptan. We show that the experimental results can be well described by the model in which interparticle interactions are described by the classical DLVO theory. We find that final gold nanoparticle aggregates have a fractal structure with a mass fractal dimension of 2.1-2.2. Aggregation of approximately 11 initial gold nanoparticles appears to be responsible for the initial color change of suspension. This kinetic study can be used to predict the time required for the initial color change of a gold nanoparticle suspension and should provide insights into the design and optimization of colorimetric sensors that utilize aggregation of gold nanoparticles.  相似文献   

7.
Most of the colloidal clusters have been produced from oil-in-water emulsions with identical microspheres dispersed in oil droplets. Here, we present new types of binary colloidal clusters from phase-inverted water-in-oil emulsions using various combinations of two different colloids with several size ratios: monodisperse silica or polystyrene microspheres for larger particles and silica or titania nanoparticles for smaller particles. Obviously, a better understanding of how finite groups of different colloids self-organize in a confined geometry may help us control the structure of matter at multiple length scales. In addition, since aqueous dispersions have much better phase stability, we could produce much more diverse colloidal materials from water-in-oil emulsions rather than from oil-in-water emulsions. Interestingly, the configurations of the large microspheres were not changed by the presence of the small particles. However, the arrangement of the smaller particles was strongly dependent on the nature of the interparticle interactions. The experimentally observed structural evolutions were consistent with the numerical simulations calculated using Surface Evolver. These clusters with nonisotropic structures can be used as building blocks for novel colloidal structures with unusual properties or by themselves as light scatterers, diffusers, and complex adaptive matter exhibiting emergent behavior.  相似文献   

8.
Metamolecules and crystals consisting of nanoscale building blocks offer rich models to study colloidal chemistry, materials science, and photonics. Herein we demonstrate the self‐assembly of colloidal Ag nanoparticles into quasi‐one‐dimensional metamolecules with an intriguing self‐healing ability in a linearly polarized optical field. By investigating the spatial stability of the metamolecules, we found that the origin of self‐healing is the inhomogeneous interparticle electrodynamic interactions enhanced by the formation of unusual nanoparticle dimers, which minimize the free energy of the whole structure. The equilibrium configuration and self‐healing behavior can be further tuned by modifying the electrical double layers surrounding the nanoparticles. Our results reveal a unique route to build self‐healing colloidal structures assembled from simple metal nanoparticles. This approach could potentially lead to reconfigurable plasmonic devices for photonic and sensing applications.  相似文献   

9.
We use decorated-lattice models to explore the phase behavior of two types of DNA-linked colloidal mixtures: systems with identical nanoparticles functionalized with two different DNA strands (mixture Aab) and mixtures involving two types of particles each one functionalized with a different DNA strand (mixture Aa-Ab). The model allows us to derive the properties of the mixtures from the well-known behavior of underlying spin-n Ising models with temperature and activity dependent effective interactions. The predicted evolution of the dissolution profiles for the colloidal assemblies as a function of temperature and number of single DNA strands on a nanoparticle M is in qualitative agreement with that observed in real systems. According to our model, the temperature at which the assemblies dissolve can be expected to increase with increasing M only for concentrations of colloids below a certain threshold. For more concentrated solutions, the dissolution temperature is a decreasing function of M. Linker-mediated interactions between Aa and Ab particles in the Aa-Ab mixture render the phase separation involving disordered aggregates metastable with respect to a phase transition between a solvent-rich and an ordered phase. The stability of the DNA-linked assembly is enhanced by the ordering of the colloidal network and the ordered aggregates dissolve at higher temperatures. Our results may explain the contrasting evolution of the dissolution temperatures with increasing probe size in Aab and Aa-Ab mixtures as observed experimentally.  相似文献   

10.
An in situ reduction approach to synthesizing gold and silver nanoparticles by using a series of newly designed, redox-active amphiphiles at basic pH is described. These amphiphiles are the conjugates of a fatty acid (e.g., oleic acid, stearic acid, and lauric acid) and a redox-active amino acid (e.g., tryptophan or tyrosine). The amphiphile-coated nanoparticles are then efficiently transferred from water to different nonpolar organic media (such as benzene, toluene, xylene, cyclohexane, and hexane) simply by acid treatment. The phase-transfer process was monitored by UV/visible spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy, and the results showed that the average particle size and size distribution remain almost unchanged after transferring to the organic media. The anchoring of the amphiphile to the nanoparticle surface was confirmed by FTIR spectroscopy and thermogravimetric analysis. A mechanism is proposed to describe the stability of colloidal Au and Ag nanoparticles formed in situ and their phase transfer to organic solvents. The presence of the amphiphile increases the thermal stability of the colloidal gold nanoparticle conjugates in organic solvents.  相似文献   

11.
We investigate the effect of small concentrations of highly charged nanoparticles on the stability of uncharged colloidal microspheres using large-scale simulations. Employing pair potentials that accurately represent mixtures of silica microspheres and polystyrene nanoparticles as studied experimentally, we are able to demonstrate that nanoparticle-induced stabilization can arise from a relatively weak van der Waals attraction between the colloids and nanoparticles. This demonstrates that the nanoparticle haloing mechanism for colloidal stabilization is of considerable generality and potentially can be applied to large classes of systems. The range of optimal nanoparticle concentrations can be tuned by controlling the attraction between colloids and nanoparticles.  相似文献   

12.
In this Article, we report on the assembly of hybrid Au@PNIPAM core-shell particles at the air/water interface, their transfer onto solid substrates, and the controlled combustion of the organic material to produce arrays of gold nanoparticles. A detailed investigation on the assembly behavior of such soft hybrid colloids at the air/water interface was performed by correlating the surface pressure-area isotherms with SEM and AFM images from samples transferred at different surface pressures. The hybrid particles display a complex behavior at the interface, and we could distinguish three distinct phases with varying interparticle spacings at different compression. The transfer process presented enables the decoration of topologically structured substrates with gold nanoparticle arrays, and the order of the initial monolayers is retained in the arrays of inorganic gold nanoparticles. The change in monolayer morphology upon compression can therefore be used to tailor the interparticle distance between approximately 650 and 300 nm without exchanging the colloids. More sophisticated gold nanostructures can be patterned into symmetric arrays using a similar protocol, which we demonstrate for nanostars and nanorods.  相似文献   

13.
The change in optical properties of colloidal gold upon aggregation has been used to develop an experimentally convenient colorimetric method to study the interfacial phase transition of an elastin-like polypeptide (ELP), a thermally responsive biopolymer. Gold nanoparticles, functionalized with a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) of mercaptoundecanoic acid onto which an ELP was adsorbed, exhibit a characteristic red color due to the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) of individual colloids. Raising the solution temperature from 10 degrees C to 40 degrees C thermally triggered the hydrophilic-to-hydrophobic phase transition of the adsorbed ELP resulting in formation of large aggregates due to interparticle hydrophobic interaction. Formation of large aggregates caused a change in color of the colloidal suspension from red to violet due to coupling of surface plasmons in aggregated colloids. The surface phase transition of the ELP was reversible, as seen from the reversible change in color upon cooling the suspension to 10 degrees C. The formation of colloidal aggregates due to the interfacial phase transition of adsorbed ELP was independently verified by dynamic light scattering of ELP-modified gold colloids as a function of temperature. Colloidal SPR provides a simple and convenient colorimetric method to study the influence of the solution environment, interfacial properties, and grafting method on the transition properties of ELPs and other environmentally responsive polymers at the solid-water interface.  相似文献   

14.
The size of gold nanoparticle aggregates was controlled by manipulating the interparticle interaction. To manipulate the interparticle interaction of gold nanoparticles prepared by citrate reduction, we applied the substitutive adsorption of benzyl mercaptan on the particle surface in the absence of the cross-linking effect. Various experimental techniques such as UV-vis absorption spectroscopy, surface-enhanced Raman scattering, quasi-elastic light scattering, and zeta-potential measurement were used to characterize the nanoparticle aggregates. Our results suggest that the replacement of the trivalent citrate ions adsorbed on the nanoparticle surface with monovalent benzyl mercaptan ions should destabilize the particles, causing aggregation and hence the increase in the size of nanoparticle aggregates. These experimental results were successfully rationalized by the classical DLVO (Derjaguin-Landau-Vervey-Overbeek) theory that describes the interparticle interaction and colloidal stability in solution. Our findings suggest that the control of surface potential is crucial in the design of stable gold nanoparticle aggregates.  相似文献   

15.
A novel synthetic route to polymer-coated ferromagnetic colloids of metallic cobalt has been developed. Well-defined end-functional polystyrenes were synthesized using controlled radical polymerization and used as surfactants in the thermolysis of dicobaltoctacarbonyl to afford uniform ferromagnetic nanoparticles. The presence of the polymer shell enabled prolonged colloidal stability of dispersions in a wide range of organic solvents and formed glassy encapsulating coatings around ferromagnetic cores in the solid state. These polymer-coated colloids assembled into robust, micron-sized nanoparticle chains when cast onto supporting surfaces due to dipolar associations of magnetic cores. Hierarchical assemblies were also prepared by blending polystyrene-coated cobalt colloids with larger silica beads.  相似文献   

16.
This feature article describes recent advances in several areas of research involving the interfacial ordering of liquid crystals (LCs). The first advance revolves around the ordering of LCs at bio/chemically functionalized surfaces. Whereas the majority of past studies of surface-induced ordering of LCs have involved surfaces of solids that present a limited diversity of chemical functional groups (surfaces at which van der Waals forces dominate surface-induced ordering), recent studies have moved to investigate the ordering of LCs on chemically complex surfaces. For example, surfaces decorated with biomolecules (e.g., oligopeptides and proteins) and transition-metal ions have been investigated, leading to an understanding of the roles that metal-ligand coordination interactions, electrical double layers, acid-base interactions, and hydrogen bonding can play in the interfacial ordering of LCs. The opportunity to create chemically responsive LCs capable of undergoing ordering transitions in the presence of targeted molecular events (e.g., ligand exchange around a metal center) has emerged from these fundamental studies. A second advance has focused on investigations of the ordering of LCs at interfaces with immiscible isotropic fluids, particularly water. In contrast to prior studies of surface-induced ordering of LCs on solid surfaces, LC-aqueous interfaces are deformable and molecules at these interfaces exhibit high levels of mobility and thus can reorganize in response to changes in the interfacial environment. A range of fundamental investigations involving these LC-aqueous interfaces have revealed that (i) the spatial and temporal characteristics of assemblies formed from biomolecular interactions can be reported by surface-driven ordering transitions in the LCs, (ii) the interfacial phase behavior of molecules and colloids can be coupled to (and manipulated via) the ordering (and nematic elasticity) of LCs, and (iii) the confinement of LCs leads to unanticipated size-dependent ordering (particularly in the context of LC emulsion droplets). The third and final advance addressed in this article involves interactions between colloids mediated by LCs. Recent experiments involving microparticles deposited at the LC-aqueous interface have revealed that LC-mediated interactions can drive interfacial assemblies of particles through reversible ordering transitions (e.g., from 1D chains to 2D arrays with local hexagonal symmetry). In addition, recent single-nanoparticle measurements suggest that the ordering of LCs about nanoparticles differs substantially from micrometer-sized particles and that the interactions between nanoparticles mediated by the LCs are far weaker than predicted by theory (sufficiently weak that the interactions are reversible and thus enable self-assembly). Finally, LC-mediated interactions between colloidal particles have also been shown to lead to the formation of colloid-in-LC gels that possess mechanical properties relevant to the design of materials that interface with living biological systems. Overall, these three topics serve to illustrate the broad opportunities that exist to do fundamental interfacial science and discovery-oriented research involving LCs.  相似文献   

17.
Although stratification in polymeric colloids and films has been known for a long time, its significance has not been recognized until surface-interfacial properties driven by mobility of dispersing agents became one of the key features that impact structure–property relationships. Learning from these studies, the last decade resulted in significant advances that have led to the development of a new generation of polymeric materials in general, and colloids in particular, that exhibit stimuli-responsive attributes. As significant as hydrophobic interactions are in biological systems, the abundance of these and other interactions can be found in colloids that are capable of recognition and dynamic responsiveness leading to life-like materials with significant technological applications. Recent advances in the development of stimuli-responsive colloidal materials are discussed in the context of surface and bulk responsive morphologies, from dynamic shape and color changing colloidal nanoparticles to expandable nanotubes and polymer-modified metal nanoparticles. Stimuli-responsive and signaling attributes of macromolecular segments of colloids along with dispersing components will play key roles during colloidal film formation. Concurrently, the development of heterogeneous functional objects that can exhibit dimensional change initiated by light or other environmental factors will form a new platform of amazing and sparkling technologies for the 21st century capable of producing on-demand self-repairing colloid-based materials.  相似文献   

18.
Dependence of colloidal interactions on salt identity, observed frequently in experiments, can be accounted for once ion specific non-electrostatic forces are included in the theory. Ability to predict the effect of added salt on the phase diagram of colloid dispersions is essential for the design of processes involving nanocolloids. The Ornstein–Zernike equation with hypernetted chain closure approximation provides a viable first estimate for the potential of mean force between ionized nanoparticles like alumina aggregates in aqueous electrolytes subject to dispersion interactions with hydrated simple ions. Calculated potentials of mean force enable the prediction of osmotic second virial coefficients and phase diagrams showing a dramatic dependence on ion type. The choice of salt therefore provides an efficient, non-intrusive way to tune the phase behavior of nanoparticle dispersions.  相似文献   

19.
The classical model of particle coagulation on colloids is revisited to evaluate its applicability on the oriented attachment of nanoparticles. The proposed model describes well the growth behavior of dispersed nanoparticles during the initial stages of nanoparticle synthesis and during growth induced by hydrothermal treatments. Moreover, a general model, which combines coarsening (i.e., Ostwald ripening) and oriented attachment effects, is proposed as an alternative to explain deviations between experimental results and existing theoretical models.  相似文献   

20.
Different pathways towards the generation and detection of a single metal nanoparticle (MNP) on a conductive carbon support for testing as an electrocatalyst are described. Various approaches were investigated including interparticle distance enhancement, electrochemical and mechanical tip-substrate MNP transfer onto macroscopic surfaces, scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM)-controlled electrodeposition, and the use of selective binding monolayers on carbon fiber electrodes (CFEs) for solution-phase-selective adsorption. A novel SECM technique for electrodepositing MNPs on CFE tips immersed 100-200 nm below the electrolyte level was developed and used to generate single Pt and Ni nanoparticles. Following their generation, we demonstrate electrocatalytic detection of Fe3+ on individual Pt particles with the CFE in a Fe3+/H2SO4 solution. We also describe an approach of attaching MNPs to CFEs by controlling the composition of monolayers bonded to the CFE. By employing a monolayer with a low ratio of binding (e.g., 4-aminopyridine) to nonbinding molecules (e.g., aniline) and controlling the position of the CFE in a colloidal Pt solution with a SECM, we attached a single 15 nm radius Pt nanoparticle to the CFE. Such chemisorbed Pt particles exhibited a stronger adhesion on surface-modified CFEs and better mechanical stability during proton reduction than MNPs electrodeposited directly on the CFE.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号