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Ordered Deposition of Inorganic Clusters from Micellar Block Copolymer Films

Year: 2000

Journal: Langmuir 2000, 16, 407-415, 20111221

Authors: Joachim P. Spatz, Stefan Mössmer, Christoph Hartmann, Martin Möller, Thomas Herzog, Michael Krieger, Hans-Gerd Boyen, Paul Ziemann, Bernd Kabius

Organizations: aUniversität Ulm, Organische Chemie III/Makromolekulare Chemie, D-89081 Ulm, Germany bUniversität Ulm, Abteilung Festkrperphysik, D-89081 Ulm, Germany cForschungszentrum Jlich, Institut für Festkrperforschung, D-52425 Juelich, Germany

A method is presented for generating quasiregular arrays of nanometer-sized noble metal and metal oxide clusters on flat substrates by the use of a polymer template. The approach is of general applicability to other metals and various oxides. In the first step, polymeric micelles with a polar core were generated by dissolution of poly(styrene)-block-poly(2-vinylpyridine) in toluene. These micelles were used as nanocompartments that were loaded with a defined amount of a metal precursor. The metal ions can be reduced in such a way that exactly one elemental or oxidic particle is formed in each micelle, where each particle is of equal size. By dipping a flat substrate into a dilute solution, a monolayer of the micelles was obtained whereby the embedded equally large particles became arranged in a mesoscopic quasihexagonal two-dimensional (2-D) lattice. Exposure to an oxygen plasma allowed removal of the polymer completely, leaving the naked metal particles firmly attached to the substrate in the same quasihexagonal order as in the monomicellar film. A modified procedure in which the precursor salt was not reduced before the plasma treatment yielded clusters of identical size and in the same 2-D order. The size (height) of the clusters could be varied between 1 and 15 nm depending on the concentration of the metal salt. The interparticle distance could be varied between 30 and 140 nm by using block copolymers with different lengths of the blocks. Such lattices of Au particles have been used to bind streptavidin proteins in an ordered array.