Jamming of Miscible Liquids via Electrostatic Repulsion Between Polystyrene-Modified Gold Nanorods and Toluene

  • Tonghua Hu
  • , Peng Zhao
  • , Xiaoyi Cai
  • , Yuanyuan Li
  • , Nyachieo Kennedy Momanyi
  • , Ningfei Sun
  • , Shuolei Zhang
  • , Xiaobo Xue
  • , Chuanfei Guo
  • , Limin Liu*
  • , Yong Xie*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Structured liquids in miscible fluids, due to ineffective resistance to withstand particle self-diffusion, differ from that in immiscible liquids because of interfacial interactions. Here, a kind of structured liquid, jammed by thiol-terminated polystyrene-modified gold nanorods (GNRs) within tetrahydrofuran and toluene (TOL), is developed by introducing electrostatic repulsion to counterbalance the self-diffusion of GNRs. First-principle calculations reveal charge transfer between the GNRs and TOL, resulting in the electrostatic repulsion. The structured liquids can be regarded as mimic “loading vehicles” to controllably carry and transport matter under electric or magnetic fields, where release rate can be adjusted by changing the concentration of the soluble matter for slow release and using the photothermal effect of the assembled GNRs for fast release. This work has developed a new assembly mechanism to form structured liquids, allowing the construction of a flexible and robust droplet platform with possible applications in microreactors, biomimetic permeable membranes, and functional liquid robots.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2306767
JournalSmall
Volume20
Issue number13
DOIs
StatePublished - 28 Mar 2024

Keywords

  • charge transfer
  • matter delivery
  • miscible fluids
  • nanoparticle self-assembly
  • structured liquids

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Jamming of Miscible Liquids via Electrostatic Repulsion Between Polystyrene-Modified Gold Nanorods and Toluene'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this