Publications by authors named "Linda Reven"

Lyotropic liquid crystalline (LC) nanomaterials are normally achieved through particle shape anisotropy. Herein, it is shown that lyotropic nematic rather than cubic phases are produced from spherical nanoparticles (NPs) with semi-flexible polymer ligands. ZrO nanocrystals (4 nm dia.

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Spontaneous phase separation in binary mixed ligand shells is a proposed strategy to create patchy nanoparticles. The surface anisotropy, providing directionality along with interfacial properties emerging from both ligands, is highly desirable for targeted drug delivery, catalysis, and other applications. However, characterization of phase separation on the nanoscale remains quite challenging.

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Perovskite nanocrystals (PNCs) and their strongly confined versions have traditionally been synthesized hot injection methods. However, there is a pressing need for a new synthesis method that offers more flexible surface chemistry, improved optical properties, and greater sample stability. Here we explore and exploit the recently introduced microwave (MW) synthesis method, focusing on temperature and coating ligands, including a polymer ligand for which the hot injection method is unsuitable.

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Ethylene oxide oligomers and polymers, free and tethered to gold nanoparticles, were dispersed in blue phase liquid crystals (BPLC). Gold nanospheres (AuNPs) and nanorods (AuNRs) were functionalized with thiolated ethylene oxide ligands with molecular weights ranging from 200 to 5000 g/mol. The BPLC mixture (ΔT ~6 °C) was based on the mesogenic acid heterodimers, n-hexylbenzoic acid (6BA) and n--butylcyclohexylcarboxylic acid (4-BCHA) with the chiral dopant (R)-2-octyl 4-[4-(hexyloxy)benzoyloxy]benzoate.

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Liquid crystal (LC)-polymer blends are important stimuli responsive materials already employed in a wide range of applications whereas nanoparticle (NP)-LC blends are an emerging class of nanocomposites. Polymer ligands offer the advantages of synthetic simplicity along with chemical and molecular weight tunability. Here we compare the phase behavior of 5CB blended with poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) and with gold NPs functionalized with thiolated PEO (AuNP-PEO) as a function of PEO concentration by DSC, POM and 13C NMR spectroscopy.

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Nanoparticle-liquid crystal (NP-LC) composites based on hydrogen bonding were explored using a model system. The ligand shells of 3 nm diameter zirconium dioxide nanoparticles (ZrO2 NPs) were varied to control their interaction with 4-n-hexylbenzoic acid (6BA). The miscibility and effect of the NPs on the nematic order as a function of particle concentration was characterized by polarized optical microscopy (POM), fluorescence microscopy and (2)H NMR spectroscopy.

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Blue phases (BPs), a distinct class of liquid crystals (LCs) with 3D periodic ordering of double twist cylinders involving orthogonal helical director twists, have been theoretically studied as potential templates for tunable colloidal crystals. Here, we report the spontaneous formation of thermally reversible, cubic crystal nanoparticle (NP) assemblies in BPs. Gold NPs, functionalized to be highly miscible in cyanobiphenyl-based LCs, were dispersed in BP mixtures and characterized by polarized optical microscopy and synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS).

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We demonstrate that the morphological diversity in liquid-crystal hybrid systems is much richer than previously anticipated. More importantly, we reveal the existence of a dual mechanism for self-assembly of nanoparticles via morphological instabilities at phase boundaries. Using numerical simulations, we study the growth of isolated nematic droplets in an isotropic liquid crystal (LC) doped with nanoparticles (NPs) and provide insight into the nature of microstructure evolution in LC hybrids.

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The structure and mechanical properties of gold nanorods and their interactions with alkenthiolate self-assembled monolayers have been determined using a novel first-principle density functional theory simulation approach. The multifaceted, 1-dimensional, octagonal nanorod has alternate Au100 and Au110 surfaces. The structural optimization of the gold nanorods was performed with a mixed basis: the outermost layer of gold atoms used double-ζ plus polarization (DZP), the layer below used double-ζ (DZ), and the inner layers used single-ζ (SZ).

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The molecular interactions driving the assembly of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) in a nematic liquid crystal (LC) are directly detected by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and thermodynamically analyzed. The orientational orders of the selectively deuterated LC matrix and AuNP ligands, each separately followed by variable temperature (2)H NMR as a function of particle concentration, were observed to be strongly correlated. The mechanism of the reversible formation of long-range, quasi-periodic nanoparticle structures is attributed to the coupling of the AuNP ligands to the LC matrix, inducing an isotropic-nematic biphasic state.

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Theory and simulations of simultaneous chemical demixing and phase ordering are performed for a mixed order parameter system with an isotropic-isotropic (I-I) phase separation that is metastable with respect to an isotropic-nematic (I-N) phase-ordering transition. Under certain conditions, the disordered phase transforms into an ordered phase via the motion of a double front containing a metastable phase produced by I-I demixing, a thermodynamically driven mechanism not previously reported. Different kinetic regimes are found depending on the location of the initial conditions in the thermodynamic phase diagram and the ratio between diffusional and nematic phase-ordering mobilities.

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Aerosil silica nanoparticles dispersed in a liquid crystal (LC) possess the interesting property of keeping memory of an electric- or magnetic-field-induced orientation. Two types of memory have been identified: thermally erasable memory arising from the pinning of defect lines versus a "permanent" memory where the orientation persists even after thermal cycling the samples up to the isotropic phase. To address the source of the latter type of memory, solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and conventional x-ray diffraction (XRD) were first combined to characterize the LC orientational order as a function of multiple in-field temperature cycles.

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A systematic analysis of defect textures in faceted nanoparticles with polygonal configurations embedded in a nematic matrix is performed using the Landau-de Gennes model, homeotropic strong anchoring in a square domain with uniform alignment in the outer boundaries. Defect and textures are analyzed as functions of temperature T, polygon size R, and polygon number N. For nematic nanocomposites, the texture satisfies a defect charge balance equation between bulk and surface (particle corner) charges.

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Dispersions of hydrophilic (A300) and hydrophobic (R812) silica aerosils in a Schiff-base-type liquid crystal (LC), p-ethoxy(benzylidene)-p-n-butylaniline (2O.4), EBBA, were characterized by deuterium nuclear magnetic resonance (DNMR). The formation and stability of random (RAN) versus anisotropic (AAN) aerosil networks under zero- versus in-field cooling was studied as a function of aerosil density and compared to previous studies of n-alkylcyanobiphenyl (nCB) dispersions.

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The chain conformation and dynamics of hydrocarbon and perfluorocarbon fatty acids adsorbed on 4 nm ZrO2 particles were characterized by solid-state 13C chemical shift and 19F NMR relaxation measurements, respectively, and compared to those from previous studies on lower surface area fumed metal oxide powders. The interdigitation of chains between neighboring particles, which increases with chain length, can be detected from the splitting of the 13C NMR and 19F NMR signals of the CH3 and CF3 groups, respectively. Similar to the case of alkanethiol self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on gold nanoparticles, this interdigitation allows for efficient chain packing despite the high surface curvature.

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Gold nanoparticles of 5 nm diameter, stabilized by 4-(dimethylamino)pyridine (DMAP), were coated with poly(sodium 4-styrene sulfonate) (PSS) via electrostatic self-assembly. The suspension stability, monitored by the gold surface plasmon band (SPB), was studied by varying the pH, the PSS chain length, and PSS concentration. Enhanced stability is obtained at pH 10 (above the pKa of DMAP) when the polymer chain length matches or exceeds the particle circumference.

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Gold nanoparticles capped with 11-mercaptoundecanylphosphonic acid (MUP) and sodium 10-mercaptodecanesulfonic acid (MDS) were characterized by a range of techniques which included solid-state 31P and 13C NMR spectroscopies. Despite similar core sizes and alkyl chain lengths, the conformational and dynamic properties of the capping ligands are very different for the two types of nanoparticles. Whereas MDS produces disordered monolayers on planar gold surfaces, the MDS-capped nanoparticles show a high degree of chain order with the onset of reversible chain disordering occurring just above room temperature.

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The bonding and dynamic properties of perfluoroalkanoic acid self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on zirconia and titania powders were characterized by Fourier transform infrared and solid-state 19F magic-angle spinning NMR spectroscopy. The perfluoro fatty acids investigated included C(n)F(2n+1)CO2H, n = 7, 13, 15 and 17. The acids bind to both metal oxides via ionic carboxylate bonds, but complete monolayers are only formed on the zirconia.

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The structures formed by the adsorption of carboxyalkylphosphonic acids on metal oxides were investigated by (1)H fast magic angle spinning (MAS), heteronuclear correlation (HETCOR), and (1)H double-quantum (DQ) MAS solid-state NMR experiments. The diacids HO(2)C(CH(2))(n)PO(3)H(2) (n = 2, 3, 11, and 15) were adsorbed on TiO(2) and two types of ZrO(2) powders having average particle sizes of 20, 30, and 5 nm, respectively. Carboxyalkylphosphonic acids bind selectively via the phosphonate group, forming monolayers with pendant carboxylic acid groups.

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