2005 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2005;
Los Angeles, CA
Session J14: Focus Session: Anisotropic Building Blocks: Synthesis and Assembly
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Tuesday, March 22, 2005
LACC
Room: 403B
Sponsoring
Units:
FIAP DMP
Chair: Sharon Glotzer, University of Michigan
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.MAR.J14.2
Abstract: J14.00002 : Biphasic nanoparticles made by electrified jetting
11:51 AM–12:27 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Joerg Lahann
(Chemical Engineering, Macromolecular Science and Engineering, University of Michigan)
Collaboration:
Dave Martin, Kyungho Roh
Nano-colloids
have recently attracted intense attention due to unique
properties that are
distinctly different from bulk solid-state materials; including
unique
magnetic, electronic, optical, chemical, and biological
characteristics. The
vision that these nano-objects could essentially act as functional
components in novel device generations, which ``magically'' assemble
following a master blueprint void any human manipulation, has
resulted in a
new ``gold rush'' in materials science. These concepts have
results in the
synthesis of a multitude of nano-objects, such as nano-wires,
nano-rods,
nano-disks, or nano-prisms.$^{ }$ Recently, nano-particles with
anisotropic
materials distributions (biphasic nano-particles) moved in the
focus of
research. Our approach differs fundamentally from the
above-mentioned
methods in that it takes advantage of electrified polymer jets to
create
anisotropic materials distributions in nano-objects. jetting is a
process to
generate liquid jets by use of electrostatic forces. It is
well-known that
high electrical potentials (typically several thousand volts)
applied
between the jetting liquids that are fed through a capillary and a
collecting substrate will induce jetting of a charged liquid. The
differences in the final morphologies from similar processes are
mainly
determined by the properties of the jetting liquids and the process
parameters. transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron
microscopy,
and scanning laser confocal microscopy, we demonstrate the
applicability of
the process to control size, shape, and materials distribution at
the
nanoscale. The resulting anisotropic nanoparticles may have
potential
applications for targeted drug delivery or as electro-rehological
fluids.$\backslash $ a) F. M. Van der Kooij, K. Kassapidou and H.
N. W.
Lekkerkerker, \textbf{Liquid crystal phase transitions in
suspensions of
polydisperse plate-like particles,} \textit{Nature }\textbf{406},
868 (2000); b) C. A.
Mirkin, R. L. Letsinger, R. C. Mucic and J. J. Storhoff,
\textbf{A DNA-based
method for rationally assembling nano-particles into macroscopic
materials}'' \textit{Nature }382, 607 (1996); c) N. B. Bowden, M.
Weck, I. S. Choi and G. M.
Whitesides, \textbf{Molecule-mimetic chemistry and mesoscale
self-assembly},
\textit{Accounts of Chemical Research }\textbf{34}, 231 (2001).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.MAR.J14.2