News & events

03.12.2009

AMI seminar: Lucio Isa

Room 170.048, Adolphe Merkle Institute, Marly

 

Thursday, December 03rd, 2009  16:00 h

 

 

Nanoparticle self-assembly at liquid-liquid interfaces (SALI): what’s the point?

 

Dr. Lucio Isa

Laboratory for Surface Science and Technology, ETH Zuerich

 

Self-assembly is found in uncountable natural phenomena and at all length scales. In recent times men have started to harness Nature’s self-organization to direct the assembly of materials and composites. Trapping at the interface, combined with lateral mobility and the presence of specific interactions, makes self-assembly of nanometer-sized colloids at liquid-liquid interfaces a process with huge potential for the creation of controlled “two-dimensional” structures and patterns and of novel ultrathin materials such as membranes and capsules. In particular, I will talk about two specific examples. Firstly I will explore the use of SALI for the deposition of non-close packed crystalline arrays for particle lithography to be used as a fabrication tool for nanoporous substrates for biosensing. The second example deals with the assembly of core-shell, metal oxide nanoparticles into ultrathin responsive membranes. I will initially focus on the kinetics of nanoparticle adsorption at the interface, both from a macroscopic (pendant drop tensiometry) and microscopic (passive microrheology) point of view. Then I will demonstrate preliminary examples of the fabrication of such membranes and of their mechanical characterization.

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