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From dispersed nanodiscs to thin films of layered organic material via reversible swelling
Authors:M. Dubois, D. Carri  re, R. Iyer, M.A. Arunagirinathan, J. Bellare, J.-M. Verbavatz,Th. Zemb
Affiliation:

aLIONS, Service de Chimie Moléculaire, Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique/Saclay, F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France

bDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Powai, Mumbai 400076, India

cDépartement de Biologie Cellulaire et Morphologie/Service de Biophysique des Fonctions Membranaires, F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France

Abstract:We show that nanodiscs stabilized with polymers order and pile up on a surface upon drying. The resulting surface films with an average thickness of one micron are made of collapsed cohesive layers with smectic long-range order. This occurs with and without plastifying stabilizing polymer and produces crevasses. The stacked discs undergo a two-to-three-dimensional crystallization while bottom layers close to the surface fuse and produce infinite bilayers. Small angle X-ray scattering experiments demonstrate that excess polymer is segregated from the crystalline stack. Water adsorption isotherms show that reversible swelling of the excess polymer does not destroy the compact stack of partially fused nanodiscs collapsed parallel to the surface. In the absence of chemical binding, the stacks of layered nanodiscs can be removed by simple washing with pure water. AFM, TEM and SEM experiments demonstrate that presence of crevasses is quenched by the presence of a plastifying polymer.
Keywords:Catanionic   Surfactant mixtures   Thin layers   Osmotic pressure   Adsorption isotherm
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