Xue, Lulu | Xiong, Xinhong | Krishnan, Baiju P. | Puza, Fatih | Wang, Sheng | Zheng, Yijun | Cui, Jiaxi
DOI:
Natural organic structures form via a growth mode in which nutrients are absorbed, transported, and integrated. In contrast, synthetic architectures are constructed through fundamentally different methods, such as assembling, molding, cutting, and printing. Here, we report a photoinduced strategy for regulating the localized growth of microstructures from the surface of a swollen dynamic substrate, by coupling photolysis, photopolymerization, and transesterification together. Photolysis is used to generate dissociable ionic groups to enhance the swelling ability that drives nutrient solutions containing polymerizable components into the irradiated region, photopolymerization converts polymerizable components into polymers, and transesterification incorporates newly formed polymers into the original network structure. Such light-regulated growth is spatially controllable and dose-dependent and allows fine modulation of the size, composition, and mechanical properties of the grown structures. We also demonstrate the application of this process in the preparation of microstructures on a surface and the restoration of large-scale surface damage.
Zhou, Xiaozhuang | Zhang, Xuan | Zhao, Huaixia | Krishnan, Baiju P. | Cui, Jiaxi
DOI:
Abstract It is challenging to post-tune the sensitivity of a tactile force sensor. Herein, a facile method is reported to tailor the sensing properties of conductive polymer composites by utilizing the liquid-like property of dynamic polymer matrix at low strain rates. The idea is demonstrated using dynamic polymer composites (CB/dPDMS) made via evaporation-induced gelation of the suspending toluene solution of carbon black (CB) and acid-catalyzed dynamic polydimethylsiloxane (dPDMS). The dPDMS matrices allow CB to redistribute to change the sensitivity of materials at the liquid-like state, but exhibit typical solid-like behavior and thus can be used as strain sensors at normal strain rates. It is shown that the gauge factor of the polymer composites can be easily post-tuned from 1.4 to 51.5. In addition, the dynamic polymer matrices also endow the composites with interesting self-healing ability and recyclability. Therefore, it is envisioned that this method can be useful in the design of various novel tactile sensing materials for many applications.
Backes, Indra K. | González-Garcı́a, Lola | Holtsch, Anne | Müller, Frank | Jacobs, Karin | Kraus, Tobias
DOI:
Hybrid electronic materials combine inorganic metals and semiconductors with π-conjugated polymers. The orientation of the polymer molecules in relation to the inorganic components is crucial for electrical material properties and device performance, but little is known of the configuration of π-conjugated polymers that bind to inorganic surfaces. Highly curved surfaces are common when using nanoscale components, for example, metal nanocrystal cores covered with conductive polymers. It is important to understand their effect on molecular arrangement. Here, we compare the molecular structures and electrical conductivities of well-defined nanoscale gold spheres and rods with shells of the covalently bound polythiophene PTEBS (poly[2-(3-thienyl)-ethyloxy-4-butylsulfonate]). We prepared aqueous sinter-free inks from the particles and printed them. The particles formed highly conductive films immediately after drying. Films with spherical metal cores consistently had 40% lower conductivities than films based on nanorods. Raman and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy revealed differences in the gold–sulfur bonds of PTEBS on rods and spheres. The fractions of bond sulfur groups implied differences in the alignment of PTEBS with the surface. More polymer molecules were bound in an edge-on configuration on spheres than on rods, where almost all polymers aligned “face-on” with the metal surface. This leads to different interface resistances: gold–polythiophene–gold interfaces between rods with π–π-tacked face-on PTEBS apparently foster electron transport along the surface-normal direction, while edge-on PTEBS does not. Molecular confinement thus increases the conductivity of hybrid inks based on highly curved nanostructures.
Huang, Zhifeng | Kay, Christopher W. M. | Kuttich, Björn | Rauber, Daniel | Kraus, Tobias | Li, Hongjiao | Kim, Sangwon | Chen, Ruiyong
DOI:
Aqueous redox flow batteries using electroactive organic materials are currently attracting significant attention. However, the influence of supporting electrolytes on the aqueous solubility, electrochemical reversibility and chemical stability of the organic components has rarely been investigated. Here, a new electrolyte design strategy towards enhanced solubility and chemical stability of active materials is proposed by using interaction-mediating species. 3 molality aqueous imidazolium chlorides, with high ionic conductivity and water-like flowability, enable a record aqueous solubility of 4.3 M for a commercially available nitroxyl radical and reversible 2e− reaction of unmodified methyl viologen at moderate concentrations. With 0.6 M electrolyte, flow cell shows remarkable chemical stability of the nitroxyl radical, excellent cycling stability over 250 cycles at 80 mA cm−2, and a peak power density of 121.6 mW cm−2 at 175 mA cm−2. Furthermore, nitroxyl radical catholyte with a concentration of 3 M is tested in a flow cell. It maintains an impressive steady energy efficiency of 65% at 30 mA cm−2. This work paves a new way for the development of high performance aqueous electrolytes based on organic materials.
Kang, Dong Jin | Jüttke, Yvonne | González-García, Lola | Escudero, Alberto | Haft, Marcel | Kraus, Tobias
DOI:
Abstract Conductive inkjet printing with metal nanoparticles is irreversible because the particles are sintered into a continuous metal film. The resulting structures are difficult to remove or repair and prone to cracking. Here, a hybrid ink is used to obviate the sintering step and print interconnected particle networks that become highly conductive immediately after drying. It is shown that reversible conductive printing is possible on low-cost cardboard samples after applying standard paper industry coats that are adapted in terms of surface energy and porosity. The conductivity of the printed films approaches that of sintered standard inks on the same substrate, but the mobility of the hybrid particle film makes them less sensitive to cracks during bending and folding of the substrate. Damages that occur can be partially repaired by wetting the film such that particle mobility is increased and particles move to bridge insulating gaps in the film. It is demonstrated that the conductive material can be recovered from the cardboard at the end of its life time and be redispersed to recycle the particles and reuse them in conductive inks.
DOI:
Hybrid electronic materials combine the excellent electronic properties of metals and semiconductors with the mechanical flexibility, ease of processing, and optical transparency of polymers. This talk will discuss hybrids that combine organic and inorganic components at different scales. Metallic and semiconductor nanoparticle cores are coated with conductive polymer shells to create “hybrid inks” that can be inkjet-printed and form conductive leads without any sintering step. Transparent electrodes are printed using ultrathin metal nanowires with core diameters below 2 nm. The chemically synthesized wires spontaneously form percolating structures when patterned with a soft stamp; this rapidly yields optically transparent grid electrodes, even on demanding soft substrates. These new hybrid electronic materials enable the fabrication of soft electronics, including flexible sensors on polymer foils, radio-frequency identification (RFID) antennae on cardboard, and soft human–machine interfaces. Selected devices will be covered at the end of the talk.
Liu, Ziyao | Escudero, Alberto | Carrillo-Carrion, Carolina | Chakraborty, Indranath | Zhu, Dingcheng | Gallego, Marta | Parak, Wolfgang J. | Feliu, Neus
DOI:
The fate of polymer-coated Eu- and Bi-doped GdVO4 nanoparticles (NPs) of cubic shape upon cellular internalization was investigated. After having been endocytosed by cells, the cubic Eu- and Bi-doped GdVO4 NP cores were partly dissolved and reshaped to rounded structures, which in control experiments could be ascribed to the acidic conditions present in endosomes/lysosomes. With progress of time, there was a significant reduction in the amount of internalized NPs per cell due to proliferation. This was of higher extent than NP exocytosis. Data of the study are compatible with the scenario that endosomal/lysosomal enzymes may partly digest the polymer shell around the NP cores, with enhanced exocytosis of the polymer fragments as compared to the NP cores.
Liu, Zhen | Zhang, Peng | Pyttlik, Andrea | Kraus, Tobias | Volmer, Dietrich A.
DOI:
Abstract Gold nanoparticles (AuNP) are frequently used in surface-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (SALDI-MS) for analysis of biomolecules because they exhibit suitable thermal and chemical properties as well as strong surface plasmonic effects. Moreover, the structures of AuNP can be controlled by well-established synthesis protocols. This was important in the present work, which studied the influence of the nanoparticles’ structures on atmospheric pressure (AP)-SALDI-MS performance. A series of AuNP with different core sizes and capping ligands were investigated, to examine the desorption/ionization efficiency (DIE) under AP-SALDI conditions. The results showed that both the AuNP core size as well as the nature of the surface ligand had a strong influence on DIE. DIE increased with the size of the AuNP and the hydrophobicity of the ligands. Chemical interactions between ligand and analytes also influenced DIE. Moreover, we discovered that removing the organic ligands from the deposited AuNP substrate layer by simple laser irradiation prior to LDI further amplified DIE values. The optimized AuNP were successfully used to analyze a wide arrange of different low molecular weight biomolecules as well as a crude pig brain extract, which readily demonstrated the ability of the technique to detect a wide range of lipid species within highly complex samples.
Momper, Rebecca | Zhang, Heng | Chen, Shuai | Halim, Henry | Johannes, Ewald | Yordanov, Stoyan | Braga, Daniele | Blülle, Balthasar | Doblas, David | Kraus, Tobias | Bonn, Mischa | Wang, Hai I. | Riedinger, Andreas
DOI:
Semiconductor nanoplatelets exhibit spectrally pure, directional fluorescence. To make polarized light emission accessible and the charge transport effective, nanoplatelets have to be collectively oriented in the solid state. We discovered that the collective nanoplatelets orientation in monolayers can be controlled kinetically by exploiting the solvent evaporation rate in self-assembly at liquid interfaces. Our method avoids insulating additives such as surfactants, making it ideally suited for optoelectronics. The monolayer films with controlled nanoplatelets orientation (edge-up or face-down) exhibit long-range ordering of transition dipole moments and macroscopically polarized light emission. Furthermore, we unveil that the substantial in-plane electronic coupling between nanoplatelets enables charge transport through a single nanoplatelets monolayer, with an efficiency that strongly depends on the orientation of the nanoplatelets. The ability to kinetically control the assembly of nanoplatelets into ordered monolayers with tunable optical and electronic properties paves the way for new applications in optoelectronic devices.
Monego, Debora | Kister, Thomas | Kirkwood, Nicholas | Doblas, David | Mulvaney, Paul | Kraus, Tobias | Widmer-Cooper, Asaph
DOI:
We report on the colloidal stability of nanoparticles with alkanethiol shells in apolar solvents. Small-angle X-ray scattering and molecular dynamics simulations were used to characterize the interaction between nanoparticles in linear alkane solvents ranging from hexane to hexadecane, including 4 nm gold cores with hexadecanethiol shells and 6 nm cadmium selenide cores with octadecanethiol shells. We find that the agglomeration is enthalpically driven and that, contrary to what one would expect from classical colloid theory, the temperature at which the particles agglomerate increases with increasing solvent chain length. We demonstrate that the inverted trend correlates with the temperatures at which the ligands order in the different solvents and show that the inversion is due to a combination of enthalpic and entropic effects that enhance the stability of the ordered ligand state as the solvent length increases. We also explain why cyclohexane is a better solvent than hexadecane despite the two having very similar solvation parameters.
