4.8 Article

Self-Assembly of Amphiphilic Plasmonic Micelle-Like Nanoparticles in Selective Solvents

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 135, Issue 21, Pages 7974-7984

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja402015s

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Maryland
  2. NIBIB, NIH
  3. Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation
  4. Maryland Nano Center
  5. NispLab
  6. FabLab
  7. NSF

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Amphiphilic plasmonic micelle like nanoparticles (APMNs) composed of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) and amphiphilic block copolymers (BCPs) structurally resemble polymer micelles with well-defined architectures and chemistry. The APMNs can be potentially considered as a prototype for modeling a higher level self assembly of micelles The understanding of such secondary self assembly is of particular importance for the bottom up design of new hierarchical nanostructures. This, article describes the self assembly, modeling, and applications of APMN assemblies in selective solvents. In a mixture of water/tetrahydrofuran, APMNs assembled into various superstructures, including unimolecular micelles, clusters with controlled number of APMNs, and vesicles, depending on the lengths of polymer tethers and the sizes of AuNP cores. The delicate interplay of entropy and enthalpy contributions to the overall free energy associated with the assembly process, which is strongly dependent on the spherical architecture of APMNs, yields an assembly diagram that is different from the assembly of linear BCPs. Our experimental and computational studies suggested that the morphologies of assemblies were largely determined by the deformability of the effective nanoparticles (that is, nanoparticles together with tethered chains as a whole). The assemblies of APMNs resulted in strong absorption in near-infrared range due to the remarkable plasmonic coupling of Au cores, thus facilitating their biomedical applications in bioimaging and photothermal therapy of cancer.

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