Argonne research unveiling the secrets of nanoparticle
haloing
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ARGONNE, Ill. (June 5, 2008) – A glass of milk, a gallon of paint and a bottle
of salad dressing all look to the naked eye like liquids. But when viewed under
a microscope these everyday liquids, called "colloids," actually
contain small globules or particles that stay suspended in solution.
This research was supported by the U.S. Department
of Energy, Office
of Science, Office of Basic
Energy Sciences as part of its mission to
foster and support fundamental research to expand the scientific foundations
for new and improved energy technologies and for understanding and mitigating
the environmental impacts of energy use. |
Colloids require a delicate balance of opposing forces for them to be stable:
attractive forces must match repulsive ones. A new colloidal stabilization
method characterized by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE)
Argonne National Laboratory may give scientists a new way to control the stability
of some colloidal suspensions.
In this approach, known as nanoparticle haloing, highly charged nanoparticles
and negligibly charged colloidal microspheres are mixed together in solution.
The nanoparticles self-organize around the microspheres to form a halo-like
structure that stabilizes the solution. This new pathway to produce materials
would not be possible through traditional routes.
The structure of the halo–the key to understanding this kind of stable colloid–has
remained a mystery because the nanoparticles that form it are more than 100
times smaller than the microspheres they surround.
By using X-rays produced by Argonne's Advanced
Photon Source (APS), Argonne
scientists, in collaboration with researchers from the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, were able to finally discover the structure of the nanoparticle
halo.
The researchers used the ultra-small-angle X-ray scattering instrument
at the APS to discover that nanoparticles form a loosely organized layer a
small distance from the microspheres' surfaces. This discovery suggests a weak
attraction between nanoparticle and microsphere, corroborating earlier theoretical
predictions that the halo can form only in such an environment.
“Because we have established a methodology to determine the structure of nanoparticle
halo, it opens a window to the systematic study of the entire nanoparticle-microsphere
phase diagram for this type of novel colloidal stabilization mechanism,” said
Argonne's Fan Zhang, a coauthor on the Langmuir paper.
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Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
By Jared Sagoff.
For more information, please contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or media@anl.gov) at Argonne.
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