Diversifying Nanoparticle Assemblies in. Supramolecule Nanocomposites Via Cylindrical

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Diversifying Nanoparticle Assemblies in Supramolecule Nanocomposites Via Cylindrical Confinement Peter Bai, Sui Yang, Wei Bao ǁ, Joseph Kao, Kari Thorkelsson, Miquel Salmeron ǁ, Xiang Zhang ǁ, Ting Xu ǀǁ * Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720 (USA) Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720 (USA) Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720 (USA) ǁ Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720 (USA) ǀ Department of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720 (USA) Supporting Information S1. TEM and Size Distribution of Au Nanoparticles a) TEM of Au NPs synthesized via a previously published method by Peng et al [1] shows a fairly monodisperse size distribution. b) Image analysis using Igor shows an average NP size distribution of 3.9 ± 0.4 nm. 1

Figure S1. TEM and Size Distribution of Au Nanoparticles [1] S. Peng, Y. Lee, C. Wang, H. Yin, S. Dai, S. Sun, Nano Res. 2008, 1, 229. 2

S2. Method of CD Spectra Simulation The CD responses of chiral plasmonic nanoparticle assemblies were simulated by using commercial software package CST Microwave Studio in Frequency Domain, which applies a finite integration technique (FIT). The FIT is an approach based on the integral formulation of the Maxwell s equations written for a chiral medium, = + = + where ε and μ are the effective permittivity and permeability of the medium, and ξ describe the excitation of electric (magnetic) dipoles by the magnetic (electric) field which is a key parameter describing the chiral property. This method is distinct from finite difference time domain methods. The polymer index of 1.6 in which the nanoparticle are embedded was used as medium index and the radius (25 nm) and pitch (50 nm) of nanoribbon helix (3 NP across) was employed for simulation according to TEM image. The chiral structure was excited by left-handed and right-handed circular polarized plane wave respectively. Then the CD signal was collected by calculating the difference between scattering signal in farfield of left- and right-handed excitation in frequency domain. Due to the increase of metal volume fraction in single nanoribbon, the CD response is redshifted with respect to previous reported results. As a comparison, the simulated CD spectra of a continuous gold helix (further increasing metal volume fraction) is shown below, which shows clear redshift of CD response (peak dip~946 nm) comparing to a nanoribbon helix (peak dip~895 nm). 3

Figure S2. Simulated scattering CD signal of a continuous gold helix in farfield of a) left- and b) right-handed excitation in frequency domain, and c) the resulting simulated CD spectrum of a Au single helix nanostructure. 4

S3. Dark Field Scattering Microscopy The CD signal of single Au NP helix was recorded using a home built inverted optical microscope (Axiovert 200, Carl Zeiss MicroImaging Inc., Thornwood, NY) equipped with a dark-field objective (100x, NA = 0.9). The sample was prepared by dropcasting nano-helix on TEM grid. The white light from a halogen lamp passes through a polarizer followed by a quarter waveplate which converts linear polarization to circular polarization (see schematic below). By rotating the fast axis of the quarter wave-plate set to -45 deg and 45 deg with respect to the axis of the polarizer, left-handed and right-handed circular polarization was generated respectively and coupled into a dark-field reflector and objective to excite the structure. Then the CD spectrum was recorded by subtracting the spectrum for right-handed circular polarization from that taken with left-handed circular polarization and normalized to the intensity of light source. All data analysis was original without smoothing. Figure S3. Schematic drawing of optical measurement setup 5

S4. Role of Small Molecule Loading in Cylindrically Confined Supramolecule Morphology A series of supramolecules based on PS(19 kdal)-b-p4vp(5.2 kdal) with various small molecule loading are used to initiate the investigation on the role of PDP small molecules on the self-assembly of supramolecules under cylindrical confinement (Table SI 4). All of the supramolecules have the same volume fraction of P4VP (f P4VP ), but varying volume fraction of the P4VP(PDP) comb block (f comb ) due to increasing PDP loading from batch I to batch IV. Sample # BCP PDP:4VP Ratio f P4VP f comb I PS(19 kdal)-b-p4vp(5.2 kdal) 0 0.22 0.22 II PS(19 kdal)-b-p4vp(5.2 kdal) 0.7 0.22 0.45 III PS(19 kdal)-b-p4vp(5.2 kdal) 1.7 0.22 0.62 IV PS(19 kdal)-b-p4vp(5.2 kdal) 3 0.22 0.73 Table S1. Supramolecules based on PS(19 kdal)-b-p4vp(5.2 kdal) used to investigate the effect of PDP small molecule loading on the resulting supramolecule morphology under cylindrical confinement. The TEM images of the nanofibers, which are stained with I 2 vapor to darken the P4VP(PDP) microdomains, are shown in Figure 4.1. Nanowires of supramolecule I exhibits a single row of P4VP(PDP) spheres in the center of the nanowires (Figure SI 4a). This morphology is consistent with its f P4VP, which lies in the spherical regime of the BCP morphology space. For supramolecule II nanowires, a slightly different double row spherical morphology is observed (Figure SI 4b). This morphology is consistent with the f P4VP of this supramolecule, but not its f comb, which lies in the lamellar regime. Interestingly, TEM images of supramolecule III (Figure SI 4c) and IV (Figure SI 4d) nanofibers also show double or triple row spherical morphology, despite the f comb of supramolecule IV being as high as 0.73, which forms P4VP(PDP) majority cylindrical morphology in bulk. In addition, the periodicity 6

of the 4 nanofiber samples are all ~24 nm. From these observations, it is apparent that the cylindrically confined supramolecule morphologies are a function of fp4vp rather than fcomb. Figure S4. Effect of PDP small molecule loading on cylindrically confined supramolecules. TEM images of cylindrically confined supramolecules a) I, b) II, c) III, and d) IV stained with I2 vapor. Scale bars are 50 nm for all images. 7

S5. TEM of P4VP(36.3 kdal)(pdp)1 homopolymer-based supramolecules with Au NPs TEM images of P4VP(36.3 kdal)(pdp)1 homopolymer-based supramolecules with a) 3 v% and b) 6 v% of ~4 nm Au NP loading, exhibiting disordered morphologies under cylindrical confinement within 35 nm AAO membrane pores. Figure S5. TEM of P4VP(36.3 kdal)(pdp)1 homopolymer-based supramolecules with Au NPs 8

S6. TEM of nanocomposite comprised of PS(19 kdal)-b-p4vp(5.2 kdal)(pdp)1.7 supramolecule and 12 vol% of ~4 nm Au NPs confined in 35 ± 3 nm AAO pores is shown below. The confined nanotubes show a high loading of NPs with virtually no discernible order. The lack of order is likely due to the high number of NPs acting as a kinetic barrier to slow the self-assembly process. 100 nm Figure S6. TEM of nanowire comprised of PS(19 kdal)-b-p4vp(5.2 kdal)(pdp)1.7 supramolecule and 12 vol% of ~4 nm Au NPs 9

S7. Single NP helical ribbon scattering spectra excited by both left handed (LCP) and right handed (RCP) circularly polarized light Figure S7. Single NP helical ribbon scattering spectra excited by both left handed (LCP) and right handed (RCP) circularly polarized light 10