Spatial
Isolation of Carbon and Silica in a Single
Janus Mesoporous Nanoparticle with Tunable Amphiphilicity
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Abstract
Like
surfactants with tunable hydrocarbon chain length, Janus nanoparticles
also possess the ability to stabilize emulsions. The volume ratio
between the hydrophilic and hydrophobic domains in a single Janus
nanoparticle is very important for the stabilization of emulsions,
which is still a great challenge. Herein, dual-mesoporous Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>@mC&mSiO<sub>2</sub> Janus nanoparticles with spatial
isolation of hydrophobic carbon and hydrophilic silica at the single-particle
level have successfully been synthesized for the first time by using
a novel surface-charge-mediated selective encapsulation approach.
The obtained dual-mesoporous Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>@mC&mSiO<sub>2</sub> Janus nanoparticles are made up of a pure one-dimensional
mesoporous SiO<sub>2</sub> nanorod with tunable length (50–400
nm), ∼100 nm wide and ∼2.7 nm mesopores and a closely
connected mesoporous Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>@mC magnetic nanosphere
(∼150 nm diameter, ∼10 nm mesopores). As a magnetic
“solid amphiphilic surfactant”, the hydrophilic/hydrophobic
ratio can be precisely adjusted by varying the volume ratio between
silica and carbon domains, endowing the Janus nanoparticles surfactant-like
emulsion stabilization ability and recyclability under a magnetic
field. Owing to the total spatial separation of carbon and silica,
the Janus nanoparticles with an optimized hydrophilic/hydrophobic
ratio show spectacular emulsion stabilizing ability, which is crucial
for improving the biphasic catalysis efficiency. By selectively anchoring
catalytic active sites into different domains, the fabricated Janus
nanoparticles show outstanding performances in biphasic reduction
of 4-nitroanisole with 100% conversion efficiency and 700 h<sup>–1</sup> high turnover frequency for biphasic cascade synthesis of cinnamic
acid