Abstract
Controlling multi-ligand assembly on nanoparticles (NPs) is critical for developing advanced nanomaterials for sensing, diagnostics, and therapy. Despite the importance of designing nanomaterials with tailored interfaces, it remains poorly understood how the physical and chemical driving forces will influence monolayer morphology for a variety of chemically functional ligand mixtures. To address this issue, we examine a series of binary monolayers composed of linear alkanethiols and mercaptocarboxylic acids, with two different end-group chemistries (--CH3, --COOH), across a range of physical hydrocarbon chain length differences. We extend a unified framework we have previously developed to quantify the monolayer structure by comparing matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) experiments with configurationally biased Monte Carlo (CBMC) simulations to probe and predict the self-assembly of these two-ligand mixtures on the surface of ultrasmall gold NPs. Our results reveal that monolayer morphology is significantly impacted by the chain length difference between the chemically distinct alkanethiol and mercaptocarboxylic acid ligands, transitioning from randomly mixed to phase-separated Janus-like domains as the hydrocarbon chain length difference increases. Our findings highlight the importance of length differences in determining monolayer structure, even for ligand mixtures containing alkyl and carboxylic acid end groups, offering strategies for tuning nanoscale surface properties for applications that would utilize the chemical functionality of the carboxylic acid moiety.
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Supplementary Information
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Additional information on the ligand exchange reactions, the TEM, UV-Vis, TGA, and MALDI-MS characterization of nanoparticles, SSR convergence, pair distribution functions, unnormalized histograms describing ligands preferential facet localization observed in CBMC simulations, and the prevalence of anti COOH conformers.
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Github repository hosting datafiles, analysis scripts, and figures used in the preparation of and reported within this manuscript.
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