Publication Date:
2010
abstract:
Arranging anisotropic nanoparticles into ordered assemblies remains a challenging quest
requiring innovative and
ingenuous approaches. The variety of interactions present in colloidal solutions of nonspherical
inorganic nanocrystals can be exploited for this purpose. By tuning depletion attraction forces
between hydrophobic colloidal nanorods of semiconductors, dispersed in an organic solvent, these
could be assembled into 2D monolayers of close-packed hexagonally ordered arrays directly in
solution. Once formed, these layers could be fished onto a substrate, and sheets of vertically
standing rods were fabricated, with no additional external bias applied. Alternatively, the
assemblies could be isolated and redispersed in polar solvents, yielding suspensions of
micrometer- sized sheets which could be chemically treated directly in solution. Depletion
attraction forces were also effective in the shape-selective separation of nanorods from binary
mixtures of rods and spheres. The reported procedures have the potential to enable powerful
and cost-effective fabrication approaches to materials and devices based on self-organized
anisotropic nanoparticles.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Cingolani, Roberto; Giannini, Cinzia
Published in: