| Literature DB >> 25173580 |
Bart de Nijs1, Simone Dussi1, Frank Smallenburg2, Johannes D Meeldijk3, Dirk J Groenendijk2, Laura Filion2, Arnout Imhof2, Alfons van Blaaderen2, Marjolein Dijkstra2.
Abstract
Icosahedral symmetry, which is not compatible with truly long-range order, can be found in many systems, such as liquids, glasses, atomic clusters, quasicrystals and virus-capsids. To obtain arrangements with a high degree of icosahedral order from tens of particles or more, interparticle attractive interactions are considered to be essential. Here, we report that entropy and spherical confinement suffice for the formation of icosahedral clusters consisting of up to 100,000 particles. Specifically, by using real-space measurements on nanometre- and micrometre-sized colloids, as well as computer simulations, we show that tens of thousands of hard spheres compressed under spherical confinement spontaneously crystallize into icosahedral clusters that are entropically favoured over the bulk face-centred cubic crystal structure. Our findings provide insights into the interplay between confinement and crystallization and into how these are connected to the formation of icosahedral structures.Year: 2014 PMID: 25173580 DOI: 10.1038/nmat4072
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841