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Electron conductive self-assembled hybrid low-molecular weight glycolipid-nanosilver gels

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arxiv 2506.17243 v1 pith:4HARZCFZ submitted 2025-06-06 cond-mat.soft cond-mat.mtrl-sci

Electron conductive self-assembled hybrid low-molecular weight glycolipid-nanosilver gels

classification cond-mat.soft cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords functionalreductionadvancedanisotropicascorbateconductivecontainingcontrol
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Low-molecular weight (LMW) hydrogels are gaining interest over macromolecular gels due to their reversible, dynamic and stimuli-responsive nature. They are potentially interesting functional materials for advanced applications such as catalysis, nanoelectronics or regenerative medicine. One common strategy to enhance the functional properties is to incorporate inorganic nanostructures. However, simultaneous control of the gel mechanics, shape and size of the nanostructures and functional properties is challenging. Here, a biobased, double amphiphilic, bolaform, single-glucose lipid (containing glucose and COOH in opposite directions) is able to coordinate silver ions, drive the formation of a self-assembled fibrous hydrogel and, after controlling the reduction time (seconds to hours) of the reduction process (NaBH4, ascorbate, $\gamma$-rays), stabilize Ag nanoparticles (NPs) of controlled size (2.8 nm $\pm$ 13%). The NPs are spontaneously embedded in the fibers' core following a two-dimensional anisotropic long-range order. Precise control of the reduction parameters (ascorbate) drives the formation of Ag nanowires, possibly due to an anisotropic coalescence process of the nanoparticles. Samples containing Ag nanowires have shown an electronic conductive response, observed with impedance spectroscopy. This works shows the potential of biological amphiphiles to develop under soft conditions (pseudo single step, water, room temperature) advanced hybrid organic/inorganic (O/I) materials with a multiscale structure, order and electron conductivity functionality

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