Effect of Surface Curvature on Colloidal Stability of Silver Nanoparticles with Monomolecular and Mixed Thiol Ligand Layers in the Presence of Alkali Cations.
Pavel MalakhovskyEgor MinakovAlexey RashkevichMikhail ArtemyevPublished in: Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry (2022)
Colloidal stability of silver nanoparticles is the critical parameter while designing colloidal colorimetric biosensors. Here, we examined colloidal stability of 11-mercaptoundecanoate-capped quasi-spherical silver nanoparticles and silver nanoplates in 0.02 M phosphate buffers with pH 8.0 containing Li + , Na + , K + , or Cs + cations. While quasi-spherical nanoparticles demonstrate a good colloidal stability in the presence of all studied cations, nanoplates aggregate in the presence of Na-phosphate buffer. The mechanism of aggregation consists in the ion-specific nanoparticle-cation bridging interaction, which is sensitive to the nanoparticle surface curvature. Increased apparent dissociation constant of carboxyl groups on the zero-curvature nanoplates' surface enhances bridging interactions and makes nanoplates colloidally unstable. Bridging interactions can be eliminated by using mixed bimolecular 11-mercaptoundecanoate-11-mercaptoundecanol surface ligand layer. Silver nanoplates with mixed ligand layer show an enhanced colloidal stability at a standard carbodiimide bioconjugation protocol.