The Mechanisms for Nanoparticle Surface Diffusion
and Chain Self-Assembly Determined from Real-Time Nanoscale Kinetics
in Liquid
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Abstract
The mechanisms for nanoparticle self-assembly
are often inferred
from the morphology of the final nanostructures in terms of attractive
and repulsive interparticle interactions. Understanding how nanoparticle
building blocks are pieced together during self-assembly is a key
missing component needed to unlock new strategies and mechanistic
understanding of this process. Here we use real-time nanoscale kinetics
derived from liquid cell transmission electron microscopy investigation
of nanoparticle self-assembly to show that nanoparticle mobility dictates
the pathway for self-assembly and final nanostructure morphology.
We describe a new method for modulating nanoparticle diffusion in
a liquid cell, which we employ to systematically investigate the effect
of mobility on self-assembly of nanoparticles. We interpret the observed
diffusion in terms of electrostatically induced surface diffusion
resulting from nanoparticle hopping on the liquid cell window surface.
Slow-moving nanoparticles self-assemble predominantly into linear
1D chains by sequential attachment of nanoparticles to existing chains,
while highly mobile nanoparticles self-assemble into chains and branched
structures by chain–chain attachments. Self-assembly kinetics
are consistent with a diffusion-driven mechanism; we attribute the
change in self-assembly pathway to the increased self-assembly rate
of highly mobile nanoparticles. These results indicate that nanoparticle
mobility can dictate the self-assembly mechanism and final nanostructure
morphology in a manner similar to interparticle interactions