Langmuir, Vol.32, No.8, 1955-1961, 2016
Determination of Concentration of Amphiphilic Polymer Molecules on the Surface of Encapsulated Semiconductor Nanocrystals
We present a method for the determination of the average number of polymer molecules on the surface of A(II)B(VI) luminescent core-shell nanocrystals (CdSe/ZnS, ZnSe/ZnS quantum dots, and CdS/ZnS nanorods) encapsulated with amphiphilic polymer. Poly(maleic anhydride-alt-1-tetradecene) (PMAT) was quantitatively labeled with amino-derivative of fluorescein and the average amount of PMAT molecules per single nanocrystal was determined using optical absorption of the dye in the visible spectral range. The average amount of PMAT molecules grows linearly with the surface area of all studied nanocrystals. However, the surface density of the monomer units increases nonlinearly with the surface area, because 0 of the increased competition between PMAT molecules for Zn-hexanethiol surface binding sites. The average value of zeta potential (zeta = -35 mV) was found to be independent of the size, shape, and chemical composition of nanocrystals at fixed buffer parameters (carbonate-bicarbonate buffer, pH 9.5 and 5 mM ionic strength). This finding is expected to be useful for the determination of the surface density of remaining carboxyl groups in PMAT-encapsulated nanocrystals.