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21.
Li HC Lee CY McCabe C Striolo A Neurock M 《The journal of physical chemistry. A》2007,111(18):3577-3584
Ab initio quantum mechanical calculations have been performed to establish the potentials for alkyl-substituted polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (POSS) monomers RxH8-x(SiO1.5)8. More specifically, we have examined the unsubstituted POSS (SiO1.5H)8 cage as well as linear and cyclic alkyl-substituted cages where one of the terminating hydrogen atoms is replaced by a hydrocarbon group, that is, R1H7(SiO1.5)8. The results for the minimum-energy configurations indicate that the presence of the linear hydrocarbon chains and cyclic intermediates have very little effect on the structure of the POSS cage. Although the POSS monomeric cage does influence the partial charges of the first few carbon atoms covalently bound to the POSS monomer, its effect on the structural properties of the alkyl chain is small. Differences arise, however, for cyclic alkyl substitutents bound to the POSS cage due to the repulsive interactions between the POSS cage and bulkier cyclic intermediates that result upon rotation of the Si-C-C-C dihedral angles. The interatomic potentials for these rotational, or torsional, terms need to be modified slightly in order to appropriately simulate sterically hindered substitutents on the cage. Our results suggest that combining an atomistic force field independently developed to describe silsesquioxanes with an independent atomistic model developed to describe hydrocarbon chains can be used in classical molecular simulation studies of most alkyl-silsesquioxanes. This avoids the need to develop specific force fields for each substituted POSS cage studied and opens up the possibility of using molecular simulation to probe the thermodynamic and structural properties of these unique nanoscale building blocks. 相似文献
22.
Gutig C Grady BP Striolo A 《Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids》2008,24(9):4806-4816
A quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) was used to measure the adsorption from aqueous solutions of CTAB (cationic) and C(12)E(6) (nonionic) surfactants on gold and silica surfaces. QCM-D allows for the determination of adsorption isotherms and also the monitoring of the dynamics of adsorption in real time. By considering the atomic-scale roughness of the solid surfaces and the surface area per head group at the air/water interface, our experiments indicate that at bulk concentrations above the critical micelle concentration adsorbed C(12)E(6) forms a monolayer-like structure on both surfaces and CTAB yields a bilayer-like structure. Although our measurements do not allow us to discriminate between the morphology of the aggregates (i.e., between flat monolayers, hemicylinders, or hemispheres in the case of C(12)E(6) and between flat bilayers, cylinders, or spheres in the case of CTAB), these results are particularly significant when compared to recent QCM-D data reported by Macakova et al. (Macakova, L.; Blomberg, E.; Claesson, P. M. Langmuir 2007, 23, 12436). These authors reported that QCM-D overestimates the amount of CTAB adsorbed on silica by as much as 30-40% as a result of entrapped water. Our analysis suggests that the effect of entrapped solvent is not as important as previously assumed and, in fact, QCM-D may not overestimate the amount of CTAB adsorbed when roughness is considered. Results for the kinetics of adsorption suggest that the aggregate structure as well as whether micelles are present may influence the adsorption mechanism. We discuss our results in the perspective of molecular theories for both the equilibrium and kinetics of surfactant adsorption. 相似文献
23.
Striolo A 《The Journal of chemical physics》2006,125(9):094709
The adsorption of polymers, copolymers, surfactants, and biopolymers is often used to engineer surfaces. Towards improving our understanding of polymer adsorption we report simulation results for the adsorption of model copolymers, resembling surfactants, on nanoscale patterned hydrophobic surfaces at infinitely dilute concentrations. The surfactants are composed by a hydrophobic tail and a hydrophilic head. Surfactant adsorption on the hydrophobic surface occurs in the tail-down configuration in which the tail segments are in contact with the surface. We investigate how the presence of a solid hard mask, used to create the nanoscale pattern on the underlying hydrophobic surface, affects the surfactant adsorption. We find that surfactant adsorption on the underlying hydrophobic surface is prevented when the characteristic dimensions of the solid hard mask are less than twice the radius of gyration. We also show that details about mask-surfactant head effective interactions have the potential to alter the characteristics of adsorption. When the mask repels the head segments, the surfactants hardly adsorb on the underlying hydrophobic surface. When the mask strongly attracts the surfactant heads, the surfactants may preferentially adsorb on the mask rather than on the underlying hydrophobic surface. Under these latter circumstances the adsorbed surfactants in some cases assume a head-down configuration in which the head segments are in contact with the mask and the tail segments extend towards the bulk solution. We explain our results in terms of enthalpy and entropy of adsorption and discuss practical implications. 相似文献