Organic Molecular Glues to Design Three-Dimensional Cubic Nano-assemblies of Magnetic Nanoparticles

Chem Mater. 2024 Jul 11;36(14):6865-6876. doi: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.4c00770. eCollection 2024 Jul 23.

Abstract

Self-assembled magnetic nanoparticles offer next-generation materials that allow harnessing of their physicochemical properties for many applications. However, how three-dimensional nanoassemblies of magnetic nanoparticles can be synthesized in one-pot synthesis without excessive postsynthesis processes is still a bottleneck. Here, we propose a panel of small organic molecules that glue nanoparticle crystallites during the growth of particles to form large nanoassembled nanoparticles (NANs). We find that both carbonyl and carboxyl functional groups, presenting in benzaldehyde and benzoic acid, respectively, are needed to anchor with metal ions, while aromatic rings are needed to create NANs through π-π stacking. When benzyl alcohol, lacking carbonyl and carboxyl groups, is employed, no NANs are formed. NANs formed by benzoic acid reveal a unique combination of high magnetization and coercivity, whereas NANs formed by benzaldehyde show the largest exchange bias reported in nanoparticles. Surprisingly, our NANs show unconventional colloidal stability due to their unique nanoporous architectures.