Published March 25, 2015 | Published + Supplemental Material
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Interaction Potentials of Anisotropic Nanocrystals from the Trajectory Sampling of Particle Motion using in Situ Liquid Phase Transmission Electron Microscopy

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Abstract

We demonstrate a generalizable strategy to use the relative trajectories of pairs and groups of nanocrystals, and potentially other nanoscale objects, moving in solution which can now be obtained by in situ liquid phase transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to determine the interaction potentials between nanocrystals. Such nanoscale interactions are crucial for collective behaviors and applications of synthetic nanocrystals and natural biomolecules, but have been very challenging to measure in situ at nanometer or sub-nanometer resolution. Here we use liquid phase TEM to extract the mathematical form of interaction potential between nanocrystals from their sampled trajectories. We show the power of this approach to reveal unanticipated features of nanocrystal–nanocrystal interactions by examining the anisotropic interaction potential between charged rod-shaped Au nanocrystals (Au nanorods); these Au nanorods assemble, in a tip-to-tip fashion in the liquid phase, in contrast to the well-known side-by-side arrangements commonly observed for drying-mediated assembly. These observations can be explained by a long-range and highly anisotropic electrostatic repulsion that leads to the tip-selective attachment. As a result, Au nanorods stay unassembled at a lower ionic strength, as the electrostatic repulsion is even longer-ranged. Our study not only provides a mechanistic understanding of the process by which metallic nanocrystals assemble but also demonstrates a method that can potentially quantify and elucidate a broad range of nanoscale interactions relevant to nanotechnology and biophysics.

Additional Information

© 2015 American Chemical Society. This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License, which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes. Received 1 January 2015. Published online 23 March 2015. Published in issue 25 March 2015. We thank Dr. Milo Lin and Dr. Matthew R. Jones at UC Berkeley for useful discussions, and Yingjie Zhang for useful discussions and taking ex situ scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of Au nanorods. Research supported in this publication was supported in part by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) under Award HDTRA1-13-1-0035, which provided for development of liquid cell TEM imaging methods; and by a grant from King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST), Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which provided for nanoparticle synthesis and characterization. Q.C. was supported by a Miller fellowship from Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science at UC Berkeley. Author Contributions: Q.C. and H.C. contributed equally to the work. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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