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Full Gamut Wall Tunability from Persistent Micelle Templates via Ex Situ Hydrolysis.

Kayla A LantzNicholas Blake ClampWessel van den BerghAmrita SarkarMorgan Stefik
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2019)
The predictive self-assembly of tunable nanostructures is of great utility for broad nanomaterial investigations and applications. The use of equilibrium-based approaches however prevents independent feature size control. Kinetic-controlled methods such as persistent micelle templates (PMTs) overcome this limitation and maintain constant pore size by imposing a large thermodynamic barrier to chain exchange. Thus, the wall thickness is independently adjusted via addition of material precursors to PMTs. Prior PMT demonstrations added water-reactive material precursors directly to aqueous micelle solutions. That approach depletes the thermodynamic barrier to chain exchange and thus limits the amount of material added under PMT-control. Here, an ex situ hydrolysis method is developed for TiO2 that mitigates this depletion of water and nearly decouples materials chemistry from micelle control. This enables the widest reported PMT range (M:T = 1.6-4.0), spanning the gamut from sparse walls to nearly isolated pores with ≈2 Å precision adjustment. This high-resolution nanomaterial series exhibits monotonic trends where PMT confinement within increasing wall-thickness leads to larger crystallites and an increasing extent of lithiation, reaching Li0.66 TiO2 . The increasing extent of lithiation with increasing anatase crystallite dimensions is attributed to the size-dependent strain mismatch of anatase and bronze polymorph mixtures.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • optical coherence tomography
  • ionic liquid
  • anaerobic digestion
  • mass spectrometry
  • molecular dynamics
  • deep learning
  • radiation therapy
  • solid state