Self-assembly of surface functionalized amphiphilic carbon dots: tuning in morphological manifestations

Sarkar, Saheli ; Dinda, Soumik ; Choudhury, Pritam ; Kumar Das, Prasanta (2019) Self-assembly of surface functionalized amphiphilic carbon dots: tuning in morphological manifestations Soft Matter, 15 (13). pp. 2863-2875. ISSN 1744-683X

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1039/c9sm00051h

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9sm00051h

Abstract

Despite the continuous surge of interest in supramolecular chemistry, the design and synthesis of building blocks to develop diverse examples of self-assemblies is still challenging. During the past decades, formation of self-assemblies such as micelles, vesicles, and gels with a fibril network using amphiphiles has been investigated at length. Considering the increasing applications of these self-aggregates across the scientific domain, it is crucial to adopt an alternative strategy for the preparation of self-aggregates using a new building block that has been applied in diverse domains. With this aim, surface functionalized carbon dots (CDs) with varying aliphatic/aromatic (cholesteryl, palmitoyl, naphthyl) substitutions linked with spacers such as ethylenediamine, p-phenylenediamine, 2,2'-(ethylenedioxy)bis(ethylamine) were developed. The surface passivated CDs formed self-assemblies in dimethylsulfoxide-water (DMSO-H2O, 2 : 1, v/v). The roles of surface functionalities and spacer units in the formation of self-assemblies using the synthesized CDs were investigated by microscopic and spectroscopic studies. Progressive morphological transition was found from vesicle-to-fiber in DMSO-H2O (2 : 1, v/v) which was dependent on surface passivating substitutions of the CDs from cholesteryl to naphthyl to palmitoyl. Together with the exclusive formation of self-assemblies using amphiphilic CDs, the present study enabled the tuning of self-organization behaviour of the CD by alteration of its surface functionality.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Royal Society of Chemistry.
ID Code:123613
Deposited On:08 Oct 2021 05:48
Last Modified:08 Oct 2021 05:48

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