Abstract

HypothesisControlling nanomaterial interfaces for emerging technologies has driven the need to understand the molecular species located there; however, challenges arise using traditional analytical techniques to directly characterize the molecular structure and local environments of these interfacial species due to their low relative populations. We hypothesized that vibrational sum frequency generation (vSFG) spectroscopy would be uniquely sensitive to the chemical modification of nanoparticle surfaces that is obscured using traditional bulk sensitive methods. ExperimentsOctadecylamine ligands were removed from model CdSe quantum dot surfaces using a common precipitation-resuspension procedure with polar protic and aprotic nonsolvents. Vibrational spectra of the ligands at the surface were collected with vSFG to directly probe the ligand ordering and coverage. Photoluminescence (PL), optical absorption, NMR, and mass spectrometry measurements were conducted for comparison. FindingsvSFG was found to be sensitive to subtle changes in ligand disorder over multiple precipitation-resuspension washes, and a limit to the number of ligand molecules removed from the surface and subsequent amount of disorder introduced to their packing was clearly observed. We also find that nonsolvents do not remain associated with the surface after washing.

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