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Characterization of Mass, Diameter, Density, and Surface Properties of Colloidal Nanoparticles Enabled by Charge Detection Mass Spectrometry

Authors :
Harper, Conner C
Harper, Conner C
Jordan, Jacob S
Papanu, Steven
Williams, Evan R
Harper, Conner C
Harper, Conner C
Jordan, Jacob S
Papanu, Steven
Williams, Evan R
Source :
ACS Nano; vol 18, iss 27, 17806-17814; 1936-0851
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

A variety of scattering-based, microscopy-based, and mobility-based methods are frequently used to probe the size distributions of colloidal nanoparticles with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) often considered to be the "gold standard". Charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS) is an alternative method for nanoparticle characterization that can rapidly measure the mass and charge of individual nanoparticle ions with high accuracy. Two low polydispersity, ∼100 nm diameter nanoparticle size standards with different compositions (polymethyl methacrylate/polystyrene copolymer and 100% polystyrene) were characterized using both TEM and CDMS to explore the merits and complementary aspects of both methods. Mass and diameter distributions are rapidly obtained from CDMS measurements of thousands of individual ions of known spherical shape, requiring less time than TEM sample preparation and image analysis. TEM image-to-image variations resulted in a ∼1-2 nm range in the determined mean diameters whereas the CDMS mass precision of ∼1% in these experiments leads to a diameter uncertainty of just 0.3 nm. For the 100% polystyrene nanoparticles with known density, the CDMS and TEM particle diameter distributions were in excellent agreement. For the copolymer nanoparticles with unknown density, the diameter from TEM measurements combined with the mass from CDMS measurements enabled an accurate measurement of nanoparticle density. Differing extents of charging for the two nanoparticle standards measured by CDMS show that charging is sensitive to nanoparticle surface properties. A mixture of the two samples was separated based on their different extents of charging despite having overlapping mass distributions centered at 341.5 and 331.0 MDa.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ACS Nano; vol 18, iss 27, 17806-17814; 1936-0851
Notes :
application/pdf, ACS Nano vol 18, iss 27, 17806-17814 1936-0851
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1449583599
Document Type :
Electronic Resource