† Key Laboratory of Colloid and Interface Chemistry,Shandong University, Ministry of Education, Jinan 250100, China, and
‡ State Key Laboratory of Solid Lubrication, Lanzhou Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China
Acc. Chem. Res., Article ASAP
DOI: 10.1021/ar200124g
Publication Date (Web): January 18, 2012
Copyright © 2012 American Chemical Society
Vesicles of surfactants in aqueous solution have received considerable attention because of their use as simple model systems for biological membranes and their applications in various fields including colloids, pharmaceuticals, and materials. Because of their architecture, vesicles could prove useful as “soft” templates for the synthesis of “hard materials”. The vesicle phase, however, has been challenging and difficult to work with in the construction of hard materials.
In the solution-phase synthesis of various inorganic or macromolecular materials, templating methods provide a powerful strategy to control the size, morphology, and composition of the resulting micro- and nanostructures. In comparison with hard templates, soft templates are generally constructed using amphiphilic molecules, especially surfactants and amphiphilic polymers. These types of compounds offer advantages including the wide variety of available templates, simple fabrication processes under mild conditions, and easy removal of the templates with less damage to the final structures. Researchers have used many ordered molecular aggregates such as vesicles, micelles, liquid crystals, emulsion droplets, and lipid nanotubes as templates or structure-directing agents to control the synthesis or assembly hard micro- and nanomaterials composed from inorganic compounds or polymers. In addition to their range of sizes and morphologies, vesicles present unique structures that can simultaneously supply different microenvironments for the growth and assembly of hard materials: the inner chamber of vesicles, the outer surface of the vesicles, and the space between bilayers. Two main approaches for applying vesicles in the field of hard materials have been explored: (i) in situ synthesis of micro- or nanomaterials within a specific microenvironment by vesicle templating and (ii) the assembly or incorporation of guest materials during the formation of vesicles.
This Account provides an in-depth look at the research concerning the association of soft vesicles with hard materials by our laboratory and others. We summarize three main principles of soft vesicle usage in the synthesis of hard materials and detailed procedures for vesicle templating and the characterization of the synthetic mechanisms. By use of these guiding principles, a variety of inorganic materials have been prepared, such as quantum dots, noble metal nanoparticles, mesoporous structures, and hollow capsules. Polymerization within the vesicle bilayers enhances vesicle stability, and this strategy has been developed to synthesize hollow polymer materials. Since 2004, our group has pursued a completely different strategy in the synthesis of micro- and nanomaterials using vesicles as reactive templates. In this method, the vesicles act not only as templates but also as reactive precursors. Because of the location of metal ions on the bilayer membranes, such reactions are restricted to the interface of the vesicle membrane and solution. Finally, using the perspective of soft matter chemistry, we stress some basic criteria for vesicle templating.
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