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Langmuir. 2015 Apr 28;31(16):4635-43. doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b00727. Epub 2015 Apr 15.

Template-assisted synthesis of Janus silica nanobowls.

Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids

Florian Guignard, Marco Lattuada

Affiliations

  1. Adolphe Merkle Institute, University of Fribourg, Chemin des Verdiers 4, CH-1700 Fribourg, Switzerland.

PMID: 25843702 DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b00727

Abstract

The preparation of anisotropic nanoparticles has drawn much attention in the literature, with most of the efforts being dedicated to convex particles. In this work, instead, we present a reliable method to synthesis silica nanobowls with one well-defined opening, covering a broad range of sizes. The nanobowls have been obtained from asymmetrically functionalized silica-polymer Janus nanodumbbells, used as templates, by removing of the polymer. Polystyrene seeds having different sizes as well as surface chemistry have been used as starting material in a two-step seeded emulsion polymerization, which leads to polymer nanodumbbells. These dumbbells are also asymmetrically functionalized due to the presence of silane groups on only one of their two hemispheres. This allows us to selectively coat the silane-bearing hemisphere of the dumbbells with a silica layer by means of a Stoeber process. The silica nanobowls are eventually obtained after either calcination or dissolution of the polymeric template. Depending on the route followed to remove the polymer, nanobowls made of pure silica (from calcination) or hybrid Janus nanobowls with a silica outer shell and a covalently bound hydrophobic polymer layer inside the cavity (from dissolution) could be prepared. The difference between the two types of nanobowls has been proved by electrostatically binding oppositely charged silica nanoparticles, which adhere selectively only on the outer silica part of the nanobowls prepared by polymer dissolution, while they attach both inside and outside of nanobowls prepared by calcination. We also show that selective functionalization of the outer surface of the Janus nanobowls from dissolution is possible. This work is one of the first examples of concave objects bearing different functionalities in the inner and outer parts of their surface.

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