Modeling the Assembly of Polymer-Grafted Nanoparticles
at Oil–Water Interfaces
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Abstract
Using
dissipative particle dynamics (DPD), I model the interfacial
adsorption and self-assembly of polymer-grafted nanoparticles at a
planar oil–water interface. The amphiphilic core–shell
nanoparticles irreversibly adsorb to the interface and create a monolayer
covering the interface. The polymer chains of the adsorbed nanoparticles
are significantly deformed by surface tension to conform to the interface.
I quantitatively characterize the properties of the particle-laden
interface and the structure of the monolayer in detail at different
surface coverages. I observe that the monolayer of particles grafted
with long polymer chains undergoes an intriguing liquid–crystalline–amorphous
phase transition in which the relationship between the monolayer structure
and the surface tension/pressure of the interface is elucidated. Moreover,
my results indicate that the amorphous state at high surface coverage
is induced by the anisotropic distribution of the randomly grafted
chains on each particle core, which leads to noncircular in-plane
morphology formed under excluded volume effects. These studies provide
a fundamental understanding of the interfacial behavior of polymer-grafted
nanoparticles for achieving complete control of the adsorption and
subsequent self-assembly