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138 \begin{document}
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141 % Title must be 150 characters or less
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143 {\Large
144 \textbf{Interfacial Thermal Conductance of Thiolate-Protected
145 Gold Nanospheres}
146 }
147 % Insert Author names, affiliations and corresponding author email.
148 \\
149 Kelsey M. Stocker,
150 Suzanne Kucera,
151 J. Daniel Gezelter$^{\ast}$
152 \\
153 251 Nieuwland Science Hall, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
154 University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA
155 \\
156 $\ast$ E-mail: gezelter@nd.edu
157 \end{flushleft}
158
159 % Please keep the abstract between 250 and 300 words
160 \section*{Abstract}
161 Molecular dynamics simulations of alkanethiolate-protected and
162 solvated gold nanoparticles were carried out in the presence of a
163 non-equilibrium heat flux between the solvent and the core of the
164 particle. The interfacial thermal conductance ($G$) was computed for
165 these interfaces, and the behavior of the thermal conductance was
166 studied as a function of particle size and ligand chain length. In
167 all cases, thermal conductance of the ligand-protected particles was
168 higher than the bare metal--solvent interface. A number of
169 mechanisms for the enhanced conductance were investigated, including
170 thiolate-driven corrugation of the metal surface, solvent mobility
171 and ordering at the interface, and ligand ordering relative to the
172 particle surface. The shortest and least flexible ligand, butanethiolate,
173 exhibited the highest interfacial thermal conductance and was the
174 least likely to trap solvent molecules within the ligand layer. At
175 the 50\% coverage levels studied, heat transfer into the solvent
176 relies primarily on convective motion of the solvent molecules from
177 the surface of the particle into the bulk. This mode of heat
178 transfer is reduced by slow solvent escape rates, and this effect was
179 observed to lower the interfacial conductance for the longer-chain ligands.
180
181 % Please keep the Author Summary between 150 and 200 words
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205 %
206
207 % \title{Interfacial Thermal Conductance of Alkanethiolate-Protected Gold
208 % Nanospheres}
209
210 % \author{Kelsey M. Stocker}
211 % \author{Suzanne Kucera}
212 % \author{J. Daniel Gezelter}
213 % \email{gezelter@nd.edu}
214 % \affiliation[University of Notre Dame]{251 Nieuwland Science Hall\\
215 % Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry\\
216 % University of Notre Dame\\
217 % Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
218
219
220 % \keywords{Nanoparticles, interfaces, thermal conductance}
221
222 % \begin{document}
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231
232 % \begin{abstract}
233 % Molecular dynamics simulations of alkanethiolate-protected and
234 % solvated gold nanoparticles were carried out in the presence of a
235 % non-equilibrium heat flux between the solvent and the core of the
236 % particle. The interfacial thermal conductance ($G$) was computed for
237 % these interfaces, and the behavior of the thermal conductance was
238 % studied as a function of particle size and ligand chain length. In
239 % all cases, thermal conductance of the ligand-protected particles was
240 % higher than the bare metal--solvent interface. A number of
241 % mechanisms for the enhanced conductance were investigated, including
242 % thiolate-driven corrugation of the metal surface, solvent mobility
243 % and ordering at the interface, and ligand ordering relative to the
244 % particle surface. The shortest and least flexible ligand, butanethiolate,
245 % exhibited the highest interfacial thermal conductance and was the
246 % least likely to trap solvent molecules within the ligand layer. At
247 % the 50\% coverage levels studied, heat transfer into the solvent
248 % relies primarily on convective motion of the solvent molecules from
249 % the surface of the particle into the bulk. This mode of heat
250 % transfer is reduced by slow solvent escape rates, and this effect was
251 % observed to lower the interfacial conductance for the longer-chain ligands.
252 % \end{abstract}
253
254 % \newpage
255
256 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
257 % INTRODUCTION
258 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
259 \section*{Introduction}
260
261 Heat transport across various nanostructured interfaces has been
262 the subject of intense experimental
263 interest,\cite{Wilson:2002uq,PhysRevB.67.054302,doi:10.1021/jp048375k,PhysRevLett.96.186101,Wang10082007,doi:10.1021/jp8051888,PhysRevB.80.195406,doi:10.1021/la904855s}
264 and the interfacial thermal conductance, $G$, is the principal quantity of
265 interest for understanding interfacial heat
266 transport.\cite{cahill:793} Because nanoparticles have a significant
267 fraction of their atoms at the particle / solvent interface, the
268 chemical details of these interfaces govern the thermal transport
269 properties.
270
271 Previously, reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics (RNEMD) methods
272 have been applied to calculate the interfacial thermal conductance at
273 flat (111) metal / organic solvent interfaces that had been chemically
274 protected by varying coverages of alkanethiolate groups.\cite{kuang:AuThl}
275 These simulations suggested an explanation for the increased thermal
276 conductivity at alkanethiol-capped metal surfaces compared with bare
277 metal interfaces. Specifically, the chemical bond between the metal
278 and the ligand introduces a vibrational overlap that is not present
279 without the protecting group, and the overlap between the vibrational
280 spectra (metal to ligand, ligand to solvent) provides a mechanism for
281 rapid thermal transport across the interface. The simulations also
282 suggested that this phenomenon is a non-monotonic function of the
283 fractional coverage of the surface, as moderate coverages allow
284 diffusive heat transport of solvent molecules that come into close
285 contact with the ligands.
286
287 Simulations of {\it mixed-chain} alkylthiolate surfaces showed that
288 solvent trapped close to the interface can be efficient at moving
289 thermal energy away from the surface.\cite{Stocker:2013cl} Trapped
290 solvent molecules that were aligned with nearby
291 ligands (but which were less able to diffuse into the bulk) were able
292 to increase the thermal conductance of the interface. This indicates
293 that the ligand-to-solvent vibrational energy transfer is a key
294 feature for increasing particle-to-solvent thermal conductance.
295
296 Recently, we extended RNEMD methods for use in non-periodic geometries
297 by creating scaling/shearing moves between concentric regions of a
298 simulation.\cite{Stocker:2014qq} In this work, we apply this
299 non-periodic variant of RNEMD to investigate the role that {\it
300 curved} nanoparticle surfaces play in heat and mass transport. On
301 planar surfaces, we discovered that orientational ordering of surface
302 protecting ligands had a large effect on the heat conduction from the
303 metal to the solvent. Smaller nanoparticles have high surface
304 curvature that creates gaps in well-ordered self-assembled monolayers,
305 and the effect of those gaps on the thermal conductance is unknown.
306
307 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
308 % INTERFACIAL THERMAL CONDUCTANCE OF METALLIC NANOPARTICLES
309 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
310 %\section{Interfacial Thermal Conductance of Metallic Nanoparticles}
311
312 For a solvated nanoparticle, it is possible to define a critical value
313 for the interfacial thermal conductance,
314 \begin{equation}
315 G_c = \frac{3 C_s \Lambda_s}{R C_p}
316 \end{equation}
317 which depends on the solvent heat capacity, $C_s$, solvent thermal
318 conductivity, $\Lambda_s$, particle radius, $R$, and nanoparticle heat
319 capacity, $C_p$.\cite{Wilson:2002uq} In the limit of infinite
320 interfacial thermal conductance, $G \gg G_c$, cooling of the
321 nanoparticle is limited by the solvent properties, $C_s$ and
322 $\Lambda_s$. In the opposite limit, $G \ll G_c$, the heat dissipation
323 is controlled by the thermal conductance of the particle / fluid
324 interface. It is this regime with which we are concerned, where
325 properties of ligands and the particle surface may be tuned to
326 manipulate the rate of cooling for solvated nanoparticles. Based on
327 estimates of $G$ from previous simulations as well as experimental
328 results for solvated nanostructures, gold nanoparticles solvated in
329 hexane are in the $G \ll G_c$ regime for radii smaller than 40 nm. The
330 particles included in this study are more than an order of magnitude
331 smaller than this critical radius, so the heat dissipation should be
332 controlled entirely by the surface features of the particle / ligand /
333 solvent interface.
334
335 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
336 % STRUCTURE OF SELF-ASSEMBLED MONOLAYERS ON NANOPARTICLES
337 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
338 \subsection*{Structures of Self-Assembled Monolayers on Nanoparticles}
339
340 Though the ligand packing on planar surfaces has been characterized for many
341 different ligands and surface facets, it is not obvious \emph{a
342 priori} how the same ligands will behave on the highly curved
343 surfaces of spherical nanoparticles. Thus, as new applications of
344 ligand-stabilized nanostructures have been proposed, the structure
345 and dynamics of ligands on metallic nanoparticles have been studied
346 using molecular simulation,\cite{Henz2007,Henz:2008qf} NMR, XPS, FTIR, calorimetry, and surface microscopies.\cite{Badia1996:2,Badia1996,Badia1997:2,Badia1997,Badia2000}
347 Badia, \textit{et al.} used transmission electron microscopy to
348 determine that alkanethiol ligands on gold nanoparticles pack
349 approximately 30\% more densely than on planar Au(111)
350 surfaces.\cite{Badia1996:2} Subsequent experiments demonstrated that
351 even at full coverages, surface curvature creates voids between linear
352 ligand chains that can be filled via interdigitation of ligands on
353 neighboring particles.\cite{Badia1996} The molecular dynamics
354 simulations of Henz, \textit{et al.} indicate that at low coverages,
355 the thiolate alkane chains will lie flat on the nanoparticle
356 surface\cite{Henz2007,Henz:2008qf} Above 90\% coverage, the ligands stand upright
357 and recover the rigidity and tilt angle displayed on planar
358 facets. Their simulations also indicate a high degree of mixing
359 between the thiolate sulfur atoms and surface gold atoms at high
360 coverages.
361
362 In this work, thiolated gold nanospheres were modeled using a united atom force field and non-equilibrium molecular dynamics. Gold nanoparticles
363 with radii ranging from 10 - 25 \AA\ were created from a bulk fcc
364 lattice. These particles were passivated
365 with a 50\% coverage -- based on coverage densities reported by Badia \textit{et al.} -- of a selection of alkyl thiolates of varying
366 chain lengths. The passivated particles were then solvated in hexane.
367 Details of the models and simulation protocol follow in the next
368 section.
369
370 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
371 % COMPUTATIONAL DETAILS
372 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
373 \section{Computational Details}
374
375 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
376 % NON-PERIODIC VSS-RNEMD METHODOLOGY
377 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
378 \subsection*{Creating a thermal flux between particles and solvent}
379
380 The non-periodic variant of VSS-RNEMD\cite{Stocker:2014qq} applies a
381 series of velocity scaling and shearing moves at regular intervals to
382 impose a flux between two concentric spherical regions. To impose a
383 thermal flux between the shells (without an accompanying angular
384 shear), we solve for scaling coefficients $a$ and $b$,
385 \begin{eqnarray}
386 a = \sqrt{1 - \frac{q_r \Delta t}{K_a - K_a^\mathrm{rot}}}\\ \nonumber\\
387 b = \sqrt{1 + \frac{q_r \Delta t}{K_b - K_b^\mathrm{rot}}}
388 \end{eqnarray}
389 at each time interval. These scaling coefficients conserve total
390 kinetic energy and angular momentum subject to an imposed heat rate,
391 $q_r$. The coefficients also depend on the instantaneous kinetic
392 energy, $K_{\{a,b\}}$, and the total rotational kinetic energy of each
393 shell, $K_{\{a,b\}}^\mathrm{rot} = \sum_i m_i \left( \mathbf{v}_i
394 \times \mathbf{r}_i \right)^2 / 2$.
395
396 The scaling coefficients are determined and the velocity changes are
397 applied at regular intervals,
398 \begin{eqnarray}
399 \mathbf{v}_i \leftarrow a \left ( \mathbf{v}_i - \left < \omega_a \right > \times \mathbf{r}_i \right ) + \left < \omega_a \right > \times \mathbf{r}_i~~\:\\
400 \mathbf{v}_j \leftarrow b \left ( \mathbf{v}_j - \left < \omega_b \right > \times \mathbf{r}_j \right ) + \left < \omega_b \right > \times \mathbf{r}_j.
401 \end{eqnarray}
402 Here $\left < \omega_a \right > \times \mathbf{r}_i$ is the
403 contribution to the velocity of particle $i$ due to the overall
404 angular velocity of the $a$ shell. In the absence of an angular
405 momentum flux, the angular velocity $\left < \omega_a \right >$ of the
406 shell is nearly 0 and the resultant particle velocity is a nearly
407 linear scaling of the initial velocity by the coefficient $a$ or $b$.
408
409 Repeated application of this thermal energy exchange yields a radial
410 temperature profile for the solvated nanoparticles that depends
411 linearly on the applied heat rate, $q_r$. Similar to the behavior in
412 the slab geometries, the temperature profiles have discontinuities at
413 the interfaces between dissimilar materials. The size of the
414 discontinuity depends on the interfacial thermal conductance, which is
415 the primary quantity of interest.
416
417 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
418 % CALCULATING TRANSPORT PROPERTIES
419 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
420 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
421 % INTERFACIAL THERMAL CONDUCTANCE
422 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
423 \subsection*{Interfacial Thermal Conductance}
424
425 As described in earlier work,\cite{Stocker:2014qq} the thermal
426 conductance of each spherical shell may be defined as the inverse
427 Kapitza resistance of the shell. To describe the thermal conductance
428 of an interface of considerable thickness -- such as the ligand layers
429 shown here -- we can sum the individual thermal resistances of each
430 concentric spherical shell to arrive at the inverse of the total
431 interfacial thermal conductance. In slab geometries, the intermediate
432 temperatures cancel, but for concentric spherical shells, the
433 intermediate temperatures and surface areas remain in the final sum,
434 requiring the use of a series of individual resistance terms:
435
436 \begin{equation}
437 \frac{1}{G} = R_\mathrm{total} = \frac{1}{q_r} \sum_i \left(T_{i+i} -
438 T_i\right) 4 \pi r_i^2.
439 \end{equation}
440
441 The longest ligand considered here is in excess of 15 \AA\ in length,
442 and we use 10 concentric spherical shells to describe the total
443 interfacial thermal conductance of the ligand layer.
444
445 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
446 % FORCE FIELDS
447 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
448 \subsection*{Force Fields}
449
450 Throughout this work, gold -- gold interactions are described by the
451 quantum Sutton-Chen (QSC) model.\cite{PhysRevB.59.3527} Previous work\cite{kuang:AuThl} has demonstrated that the electronic contributions to heat conduction (which are missing from the QSC model) across heterogeneous metal / non-metal interfaces are negligible compared to phonon excitation, which is captured by the classical model. The hexane
452 solvent is described by the TraPPE united atom
453 model,\cite{TraPPE-UA.alkanes} where sites are located at the carbon
454 centers for alkyl groups. The TraPPE-UA model for hexane provides both
455 computational efficiency and reasonable accuracy for bulk thermal
456 conductivity values. Bonding interactions were used for
457 intra-molecular sites closer than 3 bonds. Effective Lennard-Jones
458 potentials were used for non-bonded interactions.
459
460 To describe the interactions between metal (Au) and non-metal atoms,
461 potential energy terms were adapted from an adsorption study of alkyl
462 thiols on gold surfaces by Vlugt, \textit{et
463 al.}\cite{vlugt:cpc2007154} They fit an effective pair-wise
464 Lennard-Jones form of potential parameters for the interaction between
465 Au and pseudo-atoms CH$_x$ and S based on a well-established and
466 widely-used effective potential of Hautman and Klein for the Au(111)
467 surface.\cite{hautman:4994}
468
469 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
470 % SIMULATION PROTOCOL
471 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
472 \subsection*{Simulation Protocol}
473
474 Gold nanospheres with radii ranging from 10 - 25 \AA\ were created
475 from a bulk fcc lattice and were thermally equilibrated prior to the
476 addition of ligands. A 50\% coverage of ligands (based on coverages
477 reported by Badia, \textit{et al.}\cite{Badia1996:2}) were placed on
478 the surface of the equilibrated nanoparticles using
479 Packmol\cite{packmol}. We have chosen three lengths of ligands: butanethiolate ($C_4$), octanethiolate ($C_8$), and dodecanethiolate ($C_{12}$). The nanoparticle / ligand complexes were
480 thermally equilibrated to allow for ligand conformational flexibility. Packmol was then used to solvate the
481 structures inside a spherical droplet of hexane. The thickness of the
482 solvent layer was chosen to be at least 1.5$\times$ the combined
483 radius of the nanoparticle / ligand structure. The fully solvated
484 system was equilibrated for at least 1 ns using the Langevin Hull to
485 apply 50 atm of pressure and a target temperature of 250
486 K.\cite{Vardeman2011} Typical system sizes ranged from 18,310 united
487 atom sites for the 10 \AA\ particles with $C_4$ ligands to 89,490 sites
488 for the 25 \AA\ particles with $C_{12}$ ligands. Figure
489 \ref{fig:NP25_C12h1} shows one of the solvated 25 \AA\ nanoparticles
490 passivated with the $C_{12}$ ligands.
491
492 Once equilibrated, thermal fluxes were applied for 1 ns, until stable
493 temperature gradients had developed. Systems were run under moderate
494 pressure (50 atm) with an average temperature (250K) that maintained a
495 compact solvent cluster and avoided formation of a vapor layer near
496 the heated metal surface. Pressure was applied to the system via the
497 non-periodic Langevin Hull.\cite{Vardeman2011} However, thermal
498 coupling to the external temperature bath was removed to avoid
499 interference with the imposed RNEMD flux.
500
501 \begin{figure}
502 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/temp_profile}
503 \caption{Radial temperature profile for a 25 \AA\ radius particle protected with a 50\% coverage of TraPPE-UA butanethiolate (C$_4$) ligands and solvated in TraPPE-UA hexane. A kinetic energy flux is applied between RNEMD region A and RNEMD region B. The size of the temperature discontinuity at the interface is governed by the interfacial thermal conductance.}
504 \label{fig:temp_profile}
505 \end{figure}
506
507 Because the method conserves \emph{total} angular momentum and energy,
508 systems which contain a metal nanoparticle embedded in a significant
509 volume of solvent will still experience nanoparticle diffusion inside
510 the solvent droplet. To aid in measuring an accurate temperature
511 profile for these systems, a single gold atom at the origin of the
512 coordinate system was assigned a mass $10,000 \times$ its original
513 mass. The bonded and nonbonded interactions for this atom remain
514 unchanged and the heavy atom is excluded from the RNEMD velocity
515 scaling. The only effect of this gold atom is to effectively pin the
516 nanoparticle at the origin of the coordinate system, thereby
517 preventing translational diffusion of the nanoparticle due to Brownian
518 motion.
519
520 To provide statistical independence, five separate configurations were
521 simulated for each particle radius and ligand length. The
522 structures were unique, starting at the point of ligand placement,
523 in order to sample multiple surface-ligand configurations.
524
525
526 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
527 % EFFECT OF PARTICLE SIZE
528 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
529 \section*{Results}
530
531 We modeled four sizes of nanoparticles ($R =$ 10, 15, 20, and 25
532 \AA). The smallest particle size produces the lowest interfacial
533 thermal conductance values for most of the of protecting groups
534 (Fig. \ref{fig:NPthiols_G}). Between the other three sizes of
535 nanoparticles, there is no discernible dependence of the interfacial
536 thermal conductance on the nanoparticle size. It is likely that the
537 differences in local curvature of the nanoparticle sizes studied here
538 do not disrupt the ligand packing and behavior in drastically
539 different ways.
540
541 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
542 % EFFECT OF LIGAND CHAIN LENGTH
543 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
544
545 We have also utilized half-monolayers of three lengths of
546 alkanethiolate ligands -- S(CH$_2$)$_3$CH$_3$, S(CH$_2$)$_7$CH$_3$,
547 and S(CH$_2$)$_{11}$CH$_3$ -- referred to as C$_4$, C$_8$, and
548 C$_{12}$ respectively, in this study. Unlike our previous study of varying thiolate ligand chain lengths on
549 planar Au(111) surfaces, the interfacial thermal conductance of
550 ligand-protected nanospheres exhibits a distinct dependence on the
551 ligand length. For the three largest particle sizes, a half-monolayer
552 coverage of $C_4$ yields the highest interfacial thermal conductance
553 and the next-longest ligand, $C_8$, provides a similar boost. The
554 longest ligand, $C_{12}$, offers only a nominal ($\sim$ 10 \%)
555 increase in the interfacial thermal conductance over the bare
556 nanoparticles.
557
558 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
559 % HEAT TRANSFER MECHANISMS
560 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
561 %\section*{Discussion}
562
563 corrugation
564
565 escape rate
566
567 orientation of ligand
568
569 orientation of solvent
570
571 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
572 % CORRUGATION OF PARTICLE SURFACE
573 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
574 \subsection*{Corrugation of Particle Surface}
575
576 The bonding sites for thiols on gold surfaces have been studied
577 extensively and include configurations beyond the traditional atop,
578 bridge, and hollow sites found on planar surfaces. In particular, the
579 deep potential well between the gold atoms and the thiolate sulfurs
580 leads to insertion of the sulfur into the gold lattice and
581 displacement of interfacial gold atoms. The degree of ligand-induced
582 surface restructuring may have an impact on the interfacial thermal
583 conductance and is an important phenomenon to quantify.
584
585 Henz, \textit{et al.}\cite{Henz2007,Henz:2008qf} used the metal density as a
586 function of radius to measure the degree of mixing between the thiol
587 sulfurs and surface gold atoms at the edge of a nanoparticle. Although
588 metal density is important, disruption of the local crystalline
589 ordering would also have a large effect on the phonon spectrum in the
590 particles. To measure this effect, we use the fraction of gold atoms
591 exhibiting local fcc ordering as a function of radius to describe the
592 ligand-induced disruption of the nanoparticle surface.
593
594 The local bond orientational order can be described using the method
595 of Steinhardt \textit{et al.}\cite{Steinhardt1983} The local bonding environment, $\bar{q}_{\ell m}$, for each
596 atom in the system is determined by averaging over the spherical
597 harmonics between that atom and each of its neighbors,
598 \begin{equation}
599 \bar{q}_{\ell m} = \sum_i Y_\ell^m(\theta_i, \phi_i)
600 \end{equation}
601 where $\theta_i$ and $\phi_i$ are the relative angular coordinates of
602 neighbor $i$ in the laboratory frame. A global average orientational
603 bond order parameter, $\bar{Q}_{\ell m}$, is the average over each
604 $\bar{q}_{\ell m}$ for all atoms in the system. To remove the
605 dependence on the laboratory coordinate frame, the third order
606 rotationally invariant combination of $\bar{Q}_{\ell m}$,
607 $\hat{w}_\ell$, is utilized here.\cite{Steinhardt1983,Vardeman:2008fk}
608
609 For $\ell=4$, the ideal face-centered cubic (fcc), body-centered cubic
610 (bcc), hexagonally close-packed (hcp), and simple cubic (sc) local
611 structures exhibit $\hat{w}_4$ values of -0.159, 0.134, 0.159, and
612 0.159, respectively. Because $\hat{w}_4$ exhibits an extreme value for
613 fcc structures, it is ideal for measuring local fcc
614 ordering. The spatial distribution of $\hat{w}_4$ local bond
615 orientational order parameters, $p(\hat{w}_4 , r)$, can provide
616 information about the location of individual atoms that are central to
617 local fcc ordering.
618
619 The fraction of fcc-ordered gold atoms at a given radius in the
620 nanoparticle,
621 \begin{equation}
622 f_\mathrm{fcc}(r) = \int_{-\infty}^{w_c} p(\hat{w}_4, r) d \hat{w}_4
623 \end{equation}
624 is described by the distribution of the local bond orientational order
625 parameters, $p(\hat{w}_4, r)$, and $w_c$, a cutoff for the peak
626 $\hat{w}_4$ value displayed by fcc structures. A $w_c$ value of -0.12
627 was chosen to isolate the fcc peak in $\hat{w}_4$.
628
629 As illustrated in Figure \ref{fig:Corrugation}, the presence of
630 ligands decreases the fcc ordering of the gold atoms at the
631 nanoparticle surface. For the smaller nanoparticles, this disruption
632 extends into the core of the nanoparticle, indicating widespread
633 disruption of the lattice.
634
635 We may describe the thickness of the disrupted nanoparticle surface by
636 defining a corrugation factor, $c$, as the ratio of the radius at
637 which the fraction of gold atoms with fcc ordering is 0.9 and the
638 radius at which the fraction is 0.5.
639
640 \begin{equation}
641 c = 1 - \frac{r(f_\mathrm{fcc} = 0.9)}{r(f_\mathrm{fcc} = 0.5)}
642 \end{equation}
643
644 A sharp interface will have a steep drop in $f_\mathrm{fcc}$ at the
645 edge of the particle ($c \rightarrow$ 0). In the opposite limit where
646 the entire nanoparticle surface is restructured by ligands, the radius
647 at which there is a high probability of fcc ordering moves
648 dramatically inward ($c \rightarrow$ 1).
649
650 The computed corrugation factors are shown in Figure
651 \ref{fig:NPthiols_combo} for bare nanoparticles and for
652 ligand-protected particles as a function of ligand chain length. The
653 largest nanoparticles are only slightly restructured by the presence
654 of ligands on the surface, while the smallest particle ($r$ = 10 \AA)
655 exhibits significant disruption of the original fcc ordering when
656 covered with a half-monolayer of thiol ligands.
657
658 Because the thiolate ligands do not significantly alter the larger
659 particle crystallinity, the surface corrugation does not seem to be a
660 likely candidate to explain the large increase in thermal conductance
661 at the interface when ligands are added.
662
663 % \begin{equation}
664 % C = \frac{r_{bare}(\rho_{\scriptscriptstyle{0.85}}) - r_{capped}(\rho_{\scriptscriptstyle{0.85}})}{r_{bare}(\rho_{\scriptscriptstyle{0.85}})}.
665 % \end{equation}
666 %
667 % Here, $r_{bare}(\rho_{\scriptscriptstyle{0.85}})$ is the radius of a bare nanoparticle at which the density is $85\%$ the bulk value and $r_{capped}(\rho_{\scriptscriptstyle{0.85}})$ is the corresponding radius for a particle of the same size with a layer of ligands. $C$ has a value of 0 for a bare particle and approaches $1$ as the degree of surface atom mixing increases.
668
669
670
671
672 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
673 % MOBILITY OF INTERFACIAL SOLVENT
674 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
675 \subsection*{Mobility of Interfacial Solvent}
676
677 Another possible mechanism for increasing interfacial conductance is
678 the mobility of the interfacial solvent. We used a survival
679 correlation function, $C(t)$, to measure the residence time of a
680 solvent molecule in the nanoparticle thiolate
681 layer.\cite{Stocker:2013cl} This function correlates the identity of
682 all hexane molecules within the radial range of the thiolate layer at
683 two separate times. If the solvent molecule is present at both times,
684 the configuration contributes a $1$, while the absence of the molecule
685 at the later time indicates that the solvent molecule has migrated
686 into the bulk, and this configuration contributes a $0$. A steep decay
687 in $C(t)$ indicates a high turnover rate of solvent molecules from the
688 chain region to the bulk. We may define the escape rate for trapped
689 solvent molecules at the interface as
690 \begin{equation}
691 k_\mathrm{escape} = \left( \int_0^T C(t) dt \right)^{-1}
692 \label{eq:mobility}
693 \end{equation}
694 where T is the length of the simulation. This is a direct measure of
695 the rate at which solvent molecules initially entangled in the
696 thiolate layer can escape into the bulk. When $k_\mathrm{escape}
697 \rightarrow 0$, the solvent becomes permanently trapped in the
698 interfacial region.
699
700 The solvent escape rates for bare and ligand-protected nanoparticles
701 are shown in Figure \ref{fig:NPthiols_combo}. As the ligand chain
702 becomes longer and more flexible, interfacial solvent molecules become
703 trapped in the ligand layer and the solvent escape rate decreases.
704 This mechanism contributes a partial explanation as to why the longer
705 ligands have significantly lower thermal conductance.
706
707 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
708 % ORIENTATION OF LIGAND CHAINS
709 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
710 \subsection*{Orientation of Ligand Chains}
711
712 As the ligand chain length increases in length, it exhibits
713 significantly more conformational flexibility. Thus, different lengths
714 of ligands should favor different chain orientations on the surface of
715 the nanoparticle. To determine the distribution of ligand orientations
716 relative to the particle surface we examine the probability of
717 finding a ligand with a particular orientation relative to the surface
718 normal of the nanoparticle,
719 \begin{equation}
720 \cos{(\theta)}=\frac{\vec{r}_i\cdot\hat{u}_i}{|\vec{r}_i||\hat{u}_i|}
721 \end{equation}
722 where $\vec{r}_{i}$ is the vector between the cluster center of mass
723 and the sulfur atom on ligand molecule {\it i}, and $\hat{u}_{i}$ is
724 the vector between the sulfur atom and \ce{CH3} pseudo-atom on ligand
725 molecule {\it i}. As depicted in Figure \ref{fig:NP_pAngle}, $\theta
726 \rightarrow 180^{\circ}$ for a ligand chain standing upright on the
727 particle ($\cos{(\theta)} \rightarrow -1$) and $\theta \rightarrow
728 90^{\circ}$ for a ligand chain lying down on the surface
729 ($\cos{(\theta)} \rightarrow 0$). As the thiolate alkane chain
730 increases in length and becomes more flexible, the ligands are more
731 willing to lie down on the nanoparticle surface and exhibit increased
732 population at $\cos{(\theta)} = 0$.
733
734
735 % \begin{figure}
736 % \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/thiol_pAngle}
737 % \caption{}
738 % \label{fig:thiol_pAngle}
739 % \end{figure}
740
741 An order parameter describing the average ligand chain orientation relative to
742 the nanoparticle surface is available using the second order Legendre
743 parameter,
744 \begin{equation}
745 P_2 = \left< \frac{1}{2} \left(3\cos^2(\theta) - 1 \right) \right>
746 \end{equation}
747
748 Ligand populations that are perpendicular to the particle surface have
749 $P_2$ values of 1, while ligand populations lying flat on the
750 nanoparticle surface have $P_2$ values of $-0.5$. Disordered ligand
751 layers will exhibit mean $P_2$ values of 0. As shown in Figure
752 \ref{fig:NPthiols_combo} the ligand $P_2$ values approaches 0 as
753 ligand chain length -- and ligand flexibility -- increases.
754
755 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
756 % ORIENTATION OF INTERFACIAL SOLVENT
757 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
758 \subsection*{Orientation of Interfacial Solvent}
759
760 Similarly, we examined the distribution of \emph{hexane} molecule
761 orientations relative to the particle surface using the same angular
762 analysis utilized for the ligand chain orientations. In this case,
763 $\vec{r}_i$ is the vector between the particle center of mass and one
764 of the \ce{CH2} pseudo-atoms in the middle of hexane molecule $i$ and
765 $\hat{u}_i$ is the vector between the two \ce{CH3} pseudo-atoms on
766 molecule $i$. Since we are only interested in the orientation of
767 solvent molecules near the ligand layer, we select only the hexane
768 molecules within a specific $r$-range, between the edge of the
769 particle and the end of the ligand chains. A large population of
770 hexane molecules with $\cos{(\theta)} \sim \pm 1$ would indicate
771 interdigitation of the solvent molecules between the upright ligand
772 chains. A more random distribution of $\cos{(\theta)}$ values
773 indicates a disordered arrangement of solvent molecules near the particle
774 surface. Again, $P_2$ order parameter values provide a population
775 analysis for the solvent that is close to the particle surface.
776
777 The average orientation of the interfacial solvent molecules is
778 notably flat on the \emph{bare} nanoparticle surfaces. This blanket of
779 hexane molecules on the particle surface may act as an insulating
780 layer, increasing the interfacial thermal resistance. As the length
781 (and flexibility) of the ligand increases, the average interfacial
782 solvent P$_2$ value approaches 0, indicating a more random orientation
783 of the ligand chains. The average orientation of solvent within the
784 $C_8$ and $C_{12}$ ligand layers is essentially random. Solvent
785 molecules in the interfacial region of $C_4$ ligand-protected
786 nanoparticles do not lie as flat on the surface as in the case of the
787 bare particles, but are not as randomly oriented as the longer ligand
788 lengths.
789
790 These results are particularly interesting in light of our previous
791 results\cite{Stocker:2013cl}, where solvent molecules readily filled
792 the vertical gaps between neighboring ligand chains and there was a
793 strong correlation between ligand and solvent molecular
794 orientations. It appears that the introduction of surface curvature
795 and a lower ligand packing density creates a disordered ligand layer
796 that lacks well-formed channels for the solvent molecules to occupy.
797
798 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
799 % SOLVENT PENETRATION OF LIGAND LAYER
800 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
801 \subsection*{Solvent Penetration of Ligand Layer}
802
803 We may also determine the extent of ligand -- solvent interaction by
804 calculating the hexane density as a function of radius. Figure
805 \ref{fig:hex_density} shows representative radial hexane density
806 profiles for a solvated 25 \AA\ radius nanoparticle with no ligands,
807 and 50\% coverage of C$_{4}$, C$_{8}$, and C$_{12}$ thiolates.
808
809
810 The differences between the radii at which the hexane surrounding the
811 ligand-covered particles reaches bulk density correspond nearly
812 exactly to the differences between the lengths of the ligand
813 chains. Beyond the edge of the ligand layer, the solvent reaches its
814 bulk density within a few angstroms. The differing shapes of the
815 density curves indicate that the solvent is increasingly excluded from
816 the ligand layer as the chain length increases.
817
818 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
819 % DISCUSSION
820 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
821 \section*{Discussion}
822
823 The chemical bond between the metal and the ligand introduces
824 vibrational overlap that is not present between the bare metal surface
825 and solvent. Thus, regardless of ligand chain length, the presence of
826 a half-monolayer ligand coverage yields a higher interfacial thermal
827 conductance value than the bare nanoparticle. The shortest and least
828 flexible ligand ($C_4$), which exhibits the highest interfacial
829 thermal conductance value, has a smaller range of available angles relative to
830 the surface normal. The longer $C_8$ and $C_{12}$ ligands have
831 increasingly disordered orientations and correspondingly lower solvent
832 escape rates. When the ligands are less tightly packed, the cooperative
833 orientational ordering between the ligand and solvent decreases
834 dramatically.
835
836 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
837 % **ACKNOWLEDGMENTS**
838 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
839 %\begin{acknowledgement}
840 \section*{Acknowledgments}
841 Support for this project was provided by the National Science Foundation
842 under grant CHE-1362211. Computational time was provided by the
843 Center for Research Computing (CRC) at the University of Notre Dame.
844 %\end{acknowledgement}
845
846
847 %\section*{References}
848
849 \newpage
850 \bibliography{NPthiols}
851 \newpage
852 %\section*{Figure Legends}
853
854 \begin{figure}
855 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/NP25_C12h1}
856 \caption{{\bf A 25 \AA\ radius gold nanoparticle protected with a
857 half-monolayer of TraPPE-UA dodecanethiolate (C$_{12}$)
858 ligands and solvated in TraPPE-UA hexane.} The interfacial
859 thermal conductance is computed by applying a kinetic energy
860 flux between the nanoparticle and an outer shell of
861 solvent.}
862 \label{fig:NP25_C12h1}
863 \end{figure}
864
865 \begin{figure}
866 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/NPthiols_G}
867 \caption{{\bf Interfacial thermal conductance ($G$) values for 4
868 sizes of solvated nanoparticles that are bare or protected
869 with a 50\% coverage of C$_{4}$, C$_{8}$, or C$_{12}$
870 alkanethiolate ligands.}}
871 \label{fig:NPthiols_G}
872 \end{figure}
873
874 \begin{figure}
875 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/NP10_fcc}
876 \caption{{\bf Fraction of gold atoms with fcc ordering as a
877 function of radius for a 10 \AA\ radius nanoparticle}. The
878 decreased fraction of fcc-ordered atoms in ligand-protected
879 nanoparticles relative to bare particles indicates
880 restructuring of the nanoparticle surface by the thiolate
881 sulfur atoms.}
882 \label{fig:Corrugation}
883 \end{figure}
884
885 \begin{figure}
886 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/NPthiols_combo}
887 \caption{{\bf Computed corrugation values, solvent escape rates,
888 ligand orientational $P_2$ values, and interfacial solvent
889 orientational $P_2$ values for 4 sizes of solvated
890 nanoparticles that are bare or protected with a 50\%
891 coverage of C$_{4}$, C$_{8}$, or C$_{12}$ alkanethiolate
892 ligands.}}
893 \label{fig:NPthiols_combo}
894 \end{figure}
895
896 \begin{figure}
897 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/NP_pAngle}
898 \caption{{\bf The two extreme cases of ligand orientation relative
899 to the nanoparticle surface: the ligand completely
900 outstretched ($\cos{(\theta)} = -1$) and the ligand fully
901 lying down on the particle surface ($\cos{(\theta)} = 0$).}}
902 \label{fig:NP_pAngle}
903 \end{figure}
904
905 \begin{figure}
906 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/hex_density}
907 \caption{{\bf Radial hexane density profiles for 25 \AA\ radius
908 nanoparticles with no ligands (circles), C$_{4}$ ligands
909 (squares), C$_{8}$ ligands (triangles), and C$_{12}$ ligands
910 (diamonds).} As ligand chain length increases, the nearby
911 solvent is excluded from the ligand layer. Some solvent is
912 present inside the particle $r_{max}$ location due to
913 faceting of the nanoparticle surface.}
914 \label{fig:hex_density}
915 \end{figure}
916
917 \end{document}

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