Abstract

An approach for manufacturing polytetrafluoroethylene nanoparticle films using repulsive electrostatic interactions was developed. This approach used the strong repulsive force between colloidal nanoparticles and a substrate surface to cause the colloidal nanoparticles to suspend and self-assemble at a near-wall equilibrium position. A suspended monolayer was formed and was subsequently deposited on the substrate surface. A relatively large-area (3 × 3 cm(2)), close-packed unordered monolayer of polytetrafluoroethylene nanoparticles was observed. Multilayer nanoparticle films were also generated by increasing the particle concentration and deposition time. This work confirms the feasibility of nanoparticle self-assembly under repulsive electrostatic interactions and provides new routes for the large-area fabrication of monolayer and multilayer close-packed nanoparticle films.

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