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Towards Organized Hybrid Nanomaterials at the Air/Water Interface Based on Liquid-Crystal/ZnO Nanocrystals

Year: 2015

Journal: CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, Vol. 21, p 16941-16947, 20170208

Authors: Paczesny, Jan; Wolska-Pietkiewicz, Malgorzata; Binkiewicz, Ilona; Wrobel, Zbigniew; Wadowska, Monika; Matula, Kinga; Dziecielewski, Igor; Pociecha, Damian; Smalc-Koziorowska, Julita; Lewinski, Janusz; Holyst, Robert

Organizations: Polish Acad Sci, Inst Phys Chem, PL-01224 Warsaw, Poland; Warsaw Univ Technol, Fac Chem, PL-00664 Warsaw, Poland; Polish Acad Sci, UNIPRESS, Inst High Pressure Phys, PL-01142 Warsaw, Poland; Univ Warsaw, Fac Chem, PL-02093 Warsaw, Poland

The ability to self-assemble nanosized ligand-stabilized metal oxide or semiconductor materials offers an intriguing route to engineer nanomaterials with new tailored properties from the disparate components. We describe a novel one-pot two-step organometallic approach to prepare ZnO nanocrystals (NCs) coated with deprotonated 4(dodecyloxy) benzoic acid (i.e., an X-type liquid-crystalline ligand) as a model LC system (termed ZnO-LC1 NCs). Langmuir and Langmuir-Blodgett films of the resulting hybrids are investigated. The observed behavior of the ZnO NCs at the air/water interface is rationalized by invoking a ZnO-interdigitation process mediated by the anchored liquid-crystalline shell. The ordered superstructures form according to mechanism based on a ZnO-interdigitation process mediatwed by liquid crystals (termed ZIP-LC). The external and directed force applied upon compression at the air/water interface and the packing of the ligands that stabilize the ZnO cores drives the formation of nanorods of ordered internal structure. To study the process in detail, we follow a nontraditional protocol of thin-film investigation. We collect the films from the air/water interface in powder form (ZnO-LC1 LB), resuspend the powder in organic solvents and utilize otherwise unavailable experimental techniques. The structural and physical properties of the resulting superlattices were studied by using electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, X-ray studies, dynamic light scattering, thermogravimetric analysis, UV/Vis absorption, and photoluminescence spectroscopy.