Uniform Concave Polystyrene-Carbon Core–Shell Nanospheres by a Swelling Induced Buckling Process
Author(s) -
Deyu Liu,
Xinxing Peng,
Binghui Wu,
Xueyun Zheng,
Tracy T Chuong,
Jialuo Li,
ShiGang Sun,
Galen D. Stucky
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.5b05027
Subject(s) - polystyrene , swelling , shell (structure) , chemistry , nanoparticle , deformation (meteorology) , carbon fibers , composite material , core (optical fiber) , deformation mechanism , solvent , nanotechnology , chemical engineering , materials science , composite number , polymer , organic chemistry , microstructure , engineering
We have developed a facile procedure that can create asymmetrical building blocks by uniformly deforming nanospheres into C(∞v) symmetry at low cost and high quality. Concave polystyrene@carbon (PS@C) core-shell nanospheres were produced by a very simple microwave-assisted alcohol thermal treatment of spherical PS@C nanoparticles. The dimensions and ratio of the concave part can be precisely controlled by temperature and solvents. The concavity is created by varying the alcohol-thermal treatment to tune the swelling properties that lead to the mechanical deformation of the PS@C core-shell structure. The driving force is attributed to the significant volume increase that occurs upon polystyrene core swelling with the incorporation of solvent. We propose a mechanism adapted from published models for the depression of soft capsules. An extrapolation from this model predicts that the rigid shell is used to generate a cavity in the unbuckled shell, which is experimentally confirmed. This swelling and deformation route is flexible and should be applicable to other polymeric nanoparticles to produce asymmetrical nanoparticles.
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