Department of Materials Science and Engineering, ‡Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory, and §Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois , Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States.
Acc Chem Res. 2017 May 16;50(5):1125-1133. doi: 10.1021/acs.accounts.7b00048. Epub 2017 Apr 26.
For decades, one of the overarching objectives of self-assembly science has been to define the rules necessary to build functional, artificial materials with rich and adaptive phase behavior from the bottom-up. To this end, the computational and experimental efforts of chemists, physicists, materials scientists, and biologists alike have built a body of knowledge that spans both disciplines and length scales. Indeed, today control of self-assembly is extending even to supramolecular and molecular levels, where crystal engineering and design of porous materials are becoming exciting areas of exploration. Nevertheless, at least at the nanoscale, there are many stones yet to be turned. While recent breakthroughs in nanoparticle (NP) synthesis have amassed a vast library of nanoscale building blocks, NP-NP interactions in situ remain poorly quantified, in large part due to technical and theoretical impediments. While increasingly many applications for self-assembled architectures are being demonstrated, it remains difficult to predict-and therefore engineer-the pathways by which these structures form. Here, we describe how investigations using liquid-phase transmission electron microscopy (TEM) have begun to play a role in pursuing some of these long-standing questions of fundamental and far-reaching interest. Liquid-phase TEM is unique in its ability to resolve the motions and trajectories of single NPs in solution, making it a powerful tool for studying the dynamics of NP self-assembly. Since 2012, liquid-phase TEM has been used to investigate the self-assembly behavior of a variety of simple, metallic NPs. In this Account, however, we focus on our work with anisotropic NPs, which we show to have very different self-assembly behavior, and especially on how analysis methods we and others in the field are developing can be used to convert their motions and trajectories revealed by liquid-phase TEM into quantitative understanding of underlying interactions and dynamics. In general, liquid-phase TEM studies may help bridge enduring gaps in the understanding and control of self-assembly at the nanoscale. For one, quantification of NP-NP interactions and self-assembly dynamics will inform both computational and statistical mechanical models used to describe nanoscale phenomena. Such understanding will also lay the groundwork for establishing new and generalizable thermodynamic and kinetic design rules for NP self-assembly. Synergies with NP synthesis will enable investigations of building blocks with novel, perhaps even evolving or active behavior. Moreover, in the long run, we foresee the possibility of applying the guidelines and models of fundamental nanoscale interactions which are uncovered under liquid-phase TEM to biological and biomimetic systems at similar dimensions.
几十年来,自组装科学的首要目标之一一直是从底层定义构建具有丰富和自适应相行为的功能性人工材料所需的规则。为此,化学家、物理学家、材料科学家和生物学家的计算和实验工作都建立了跨越两个学科和长度尺度的知识库。事实上,今天对自组装的控制甚至扩展到了超分子和分子水平,晶体工程和多孔材料的设计正在成为令人兴奋的探索领域。然而,至少在纳米尺度上,还有很多石头需要翻动。虽然纳米粒子 (NP) 合成的最新突破积累了大量的纳米级构建块,但 NP-NP 相互作用在现场仍然难以量化,这在很大程度上是由于技术和理论上的障碍。虽然越来越多的自组装结构的应用正在得到证明,但仍然难以预测——因此也难以设计——这些结构形成的途径。在这里,我们描述了使用液相透射电子显微镜 (TEM) 进行的研究如何开始解决这些具有深远意义的基本问题。液相 TEM 具有解析溶液中单 NP 运动和轨迹的独特能力,使其成为研究 NP 自组装动力学的强大工具。自 2012 年以来,液相 TEM 已用于研究各种简单金属 NP 的自组装行为。然而,在本报告中,我们重点介绍我们使用各向异性 NP 的工作,我们表明它们具有非常不同的自组装行为,特别是我们和该领域的其他人正在开发的分析方法如何将它们的运动和轨迹通过液相 TEM 揭示出来,转化为对潜在相互作用和动力学的定量理解。一般来说,液相 TEM 研究可能有助于弥合纳米尺度自组装理解和控制方面的持久差距。一方面,NP-NP 相互作用和自组装动力学的量化将为用于描述纳米尺度现象的计算和统计力学模型提供信息。这种理解也将为建立 NP 自组装的新的和可推广的热力学和动力学设计规则奠定基础。与 NP 合成的协同作用将使人们能够研究具有新颖的、甚至是不断发展或活跃的行为的构建块。此外,从长远来看,我们预计可以将在液相 TEM 下发现的基本纳米尺度相互作用的指导原则和模型应用于具有相似尺寸的生物和仿生系统。