Two-dimensional (2D)
lamellar nanostructures have attracted much
interest due to their unique structure and properties. Various fabrication
methods have been developed in recent years, including solution self-assembly,
exfoliation, and Langmuir monolayer and Langmuir–Blodgett (LB)
deposition. In this work, two kinds of facile methods were applied
to fabricate lamellar structures of amphiphilic molecules, such as
10,12-pentacosadiynoic acid (PCDA). In method I, the amphiphilic molecules
were introduced into aqueous solutions with dimethylformamide (DMF),
a solvent miscible with water, through a mass transfer process across
a planar liquid/liquid interface; in method II, the DMF solution of
the amphiphilic molecules was added directly onto the aqueous solution
surface. With the spread and diffusion of DMF, nanosheets with lamellar
structures formed in the aqueous solution and at the air/liquid interface,
respectively. It is very interesting that the nanosheets obtained
through these two methods consist of an even number and odd number
of PCDA monolayers, respectively, reflecting different fabrication
mechanisms. Method I provides an approach to gently mix organic solutions
with aqueous solutions, while method II can be regarded as an extension
of the Langmuir monolayer technique, which combines the interfacial
assembly with that in solution. These methods have been extended to
a series of amphiphilic molecules, and ordered layered structures
have been obtained successfully.