Abstract
Metal nanoparticles exhibit unique optical characteristics in visible spectra produced by local surface plasmon resonance (SPR) for a wide range of optical and electronic applications. We report the synthesis of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) surfactant (PNIPAM-C18)-functionalized metal nanoparticles and ordered superlattice arrays through an interfacial self-assembly process. The method is simple and reliable without using complex chemistry. The PNIPAM-C18-functionalized metal nanoparticles and ordered superlattices exhibit responsive behavior modulated by external temperature and relative humidity (RH). In situ grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering studies confirmed that the superlattice structure of PNIPAM-C18 surfactant-functionalized nanoparticle arrays shrink and spring back reversibly based on external thermal and RH conditions, which allow flexible manipulation of interparticle spacing for tunable SPR. PNIPAM-C18 surfactants play a key role in accomplishing this responsive property. The ease of fabrication of the responsive nanostructure facilitates investigation of nanoparticle coupling that depends on interparticle separation for potential applications in chemical and biological sensors as well as energy storage devices.
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