Publication | Open Access
Tolerance to structural disorder and tunable mechanical behavior in self-assembled superlattices of polymer-grafted nanocrystals
71
Citations
43
References
2017
Year
EngineeringBiomimetic MaterialsPolymer NanotechnologyNanostructured PolymerPolymer-grafted NanocrystalsAccessible Superlattice ArchitecturesPolymer NanocompositesNanoengineeringPolymer Nanostructured MaterialsStructural DisorderNanostructure SynthesisHybrid MaterialsMaterials ScienceSelf-assembled SuperlatticesNanotechnologySuperlattice Mechanical BehaviorNanocrystalline MaterialMechanical PropertiesNanomaterialsSelf-assemblyPolymer ScienceApplied PhysicsNanofabricationNanocompositePolymer Self-assemblySuperlattice DimensionsNanoarchitectonicsNanostructures
Large, freestanding membranes with remarkably high elastic modulus (>10 GPa) have been fabricated through the self-assembly of ligand-stabilized inorganic nanocrystals, even though these nanocrystals are connected only by soft organic ligands (e.g., dodecanethiol or DNA) that are not cross-linked or entangled. Recent developments in the synthesis of polymer-grafted nanocrystals have greatly expanded the library of accessible superlattice architectures, which allows superlattice mechanical behavior to be linked to specific structural features. Here, colloidal self-assembly is used to organize polystyrene-grafted Au nanocrystals at a fluid interface to form ordered solids with sub-10-nm periodic features. Thin-film buckling and nanoindentation are used to evaluate the mechanical behavior of polymer-grafted nanocrystal superlattices while exploring the role of polymer structural conformation, nanocrystal packing, and superlattice dimensions. Superlattices containing 3-20 vol % Au are found to have an elastic modulus of ∼6-19 GPa, and hardness of ∼120-170 MPa. We find that rapidly self-assembled superlattices have the highest elastic modulus, despite containing significant structural defects. Polymer extension, interdigitation, and grafting density are determined to be critical parameters that govern superlattice elastic and plastic deformation.
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