| Literature DB >> 30375393 |
Yang Yang1,2, Guangdong Chen1, Srinivas Thanneeru3, Jie He3, Kun Liu4, Zhihong Nie5.
Abstract
The design and assembly of monodisperse colloidal particles not only advances the development of functional materials, but also provides colloidal model systems for understanding phase behaviors of molecules. This communication describes the gram-scale synthesis of highly uniform colloidal cuboids with tunable dimension and shape biaxiality and their molecular mesogen-like assembly into various mesophasic structures in pristine purity. The synthesis relies on the nanoemulsion-guided generation of ammonium sulfate crystals that template the subsequent silica coating. The shape of the cuboidal particles can be tuned from square platelike, to biaxial boardlike, and to rodlike by independently controlling the length, width and thickness of the particles. We demonstrated the assembly of the cuboidal colloids into highly pure mesoscopic liquid crystal phases, including smectic A, biaxial smectic A, crystal B, discotic, and columnar phases, as well as established a correlation between mesophasic formation and colloidal biaxiality in experiments.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30375393 PMCID: PMC6207716 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-06975-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of the synthesis and structure of colloidal cuboids. a Schematics illustrating the synthesis of colloidal cuboids based on (NH4)2SO4 crystal-templated hydrolysis of silica precursors. b SEM image of representative monodisperse cuboidal particles (L = 3600 nm, W = 870 nm, T = 220 nm). Inset photo shows the birefringence of a suspension of 0.2 wt% colloids in ethanol upon shaking (taken between cross-polarizers). c, d SEM images of cuboidal particles after removal of (NH4)2SO4 core: c top view of a fractured cuboid with an open silica shell and d side view of intact cuboids with closed silica shell. Bottom schematics illustrate the corresponding facets of (NH4)2SO4 crystal. Scale bars, 2 μm in (b) and 200 nm in (c, d)
Fig. 4LC phases of cuboidal colloids with different geometries. Representative (a, e, i, m, q) SEM images, corresponding large-area (b, f, j, n, r) and enlarged (c, g, k, o, s) POM images, and schematic illustrations (d, h, l, p, t) of LC phases assembled from different cuboidal colloids in planar capillary: SmAu phase, cuboids of L = 2350 nm, W = 360 nm, T = 125 nm (a–d), SmAb phase, cuboids of L = 3270 nm, W = 830 nm, T = 78 nm (e–h), crystal B phase, cuboids of L = 2640 nm, W = 750 nm, T = 100 nm (i–l), N− phase, cuboids of L = 4080 nm, W = 1530 nm, T = 70 nm (m–p), Col phase, cuboids of L = 3720 nm, W = 3040 nm, T = 70 nm (q–t). Scale bars, 5 μm in (a, e, i, m, q), 100 μm in (b, j, n), 200 μm in (f, r), 20 μm in (c, g, k, o), and 50 μm in (s)
Fig. 2Characterization of the structure and composition of colloidal cuboids. a Annular dark field TEM image and TEM-EDS maps of a cuboidal particle (L = 5100 nm, W = 3400 nm, T = 80 nm). b XRD pattern, c TEM image, and d corresponding selected area electron diffraction pattern of a cuboid (L = 3200 nm, W = 880 nm, T = 180 nm). Scale bars, 2 μm in (a), 1 μm in (c), and 10 nm−1 in (d)
Fig. 3Representative SEM images of colloidal cuboids with different shapes. Cuboidal particles in c were synthesized with ethanol (500 μl), Fe2(SO4)3 (40 mg ml−1, 140 μl), NH3 (60 μl), SC (0 μl), and TEOS (50 μl). Using synthetic condition for c as reference, the adjustments for synthesizing other cuboidal particles were: a NH3 (200 μl), b ethanol (0 μl), d SC (0.18 M, 10 μl), e SC (0.18 M, 30 μl), f SC (0.18 M, 50 μl), g SC (0.18 M, 70 μl), h ethanol (1800 μl), and i ethanol (2000 μl), while other parameters were the same. Scale bars, 2 μm in (a–i) and 500 nm in insets of (h, i). j–l The dependency of colloidal geometry on the amount of (j) ethanol, k SC, and l MW of PVP. Error bars in (j–l) represent standard deviations by measuring 200 samples for each point
Fig. 5Colloidal shape biaxiality effect on the phase diagram. Phase diagram of cuboidal particles as a function of κ1 and κ2. The dashed lines correspond to different θ values as shown on the lines