Publications by authors named "Linxiuzi Yu"

To achieve chiral amplification, life uses small chiral molecules as building blocks to construct hierarchical chiral architectures that can realize advanced physiological functions. Inspired by the chiral amplification strategy of nature, we herein demonstrate that the chiral assembly of chiral gold nanorods (GNRs) leads to enhanced optical asymmetry factors (-factors), up to 0.24.

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Colloidal molecule clusters (CMCs) are promising building blocks with molecule-like symmetry, offering exceptional synergistic properties for applications in plasmonics and catalysis. Traditional CMC fabrication has been limited to simple molecule-like structures utilizing isotropic particles. Here, we employ molecular dynamics simulation to investigate the co-assembly of anisotropic nanorods (NRs) and the stimulus-responsive polymer (SRP) via reversible adsorption.

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We investigate the molecular origin of mechanical reinforcement in a polymer nanocomposite (PNC) under a glass state via molecular dynamics simulations. The strength of the PNC system is found to be reinforced mainly via reduced plastic deformations of the nanoparticle neighborhood (NN). Such a reinforcement effect is found to decay with an increase in the strain rate.

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Two-dimensional polymers (2DPs), single-layer networks of covalently linked monomers, show perspectives as membranes and in electronics. However, 2D polymerization of monomers in orthogonal directions limited the formation of 2DPs on nanoparticles (NPs) with high surface curvatures. Here we propose a high-curvature 2D polymerization to form a single-layer 2DP network as a non-contacting ligand on the surface of NPs for their stabilization and functionalization.

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Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) is the most widely used polymer to decorate inorganic nanoparticles (NPs) by the "grafting-to" method for antifouling properties. PEG also shows diverse supramolecular interactions with nanoparticle surfaces and polar molecules, suggesting that the physisorption between PEG chains and NPs cannot be ignored in the "grafting-to" process. However, the effect of physisorption of PEG to NPs on the process of chemisorption has been rarely studied.

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The formation of polymer-patch nanoparticles (PNPs) involves a condensation process of grafted chains on a nanoparticle (NP) surface, which is conventionally achieved via a fine-tuning of the solvent quality. However, such a critical solvent condition differs dramatically between polymers, and the formation mechanism of different patchy structures remains under debate. In this study, we demonstrate by a combined simulation and experimental study that such a surface-patterning process can be easily achieved via a simple solvent evaporation process, which creates a natural nonsolvent condition and is, in principle, adaptable for all polymers.

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Patchy nanoparticles (PNPs) have received increased attention since they serve as a new type of self-assembly unit. However, the precise synthesis of PNPs with target patch numbers and their spatial distribution on a nanoparticle (NP) surface are still a formidable challenge. A recent experimental study [R.

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