| Literature DB >> 30873667 |
Tae Min Choi1, Gun Ho Lee1, Young-Seok Kim2, Jin-Gyu Park3, Hyerim Hwang3, Shin-Hyun Kim1.
Abstract
Colloidal particles with a repulsive interparticle potential spontaneously form crystalline lattices, which are used as a motif for photonic materials. It is difficult to predict the crystal arrangement in spherical volume as lattices are incompatible with a spherical surface. Here, the optimum arrangement of charged colloids is experimentally investigated by encapsulating them in double-emulsion drops. Under conditions of strong interparticle repulsion, the colloidal crystal rapidly grows from the surface toward the center of the microcapsule, forming an onion-like arrangement. By contrast, for weak repulsion, crystallites slowly grow and fuse through rearrangement to form a single-crystal phase. Single-crystal structure is energetically favorable even for strong repulsion. Nevertheless, a high energy barrier to colloidal rearrangement kinetically arrests the onion-like structure formed by heterogeneous nucleation. Unlike the isotropic onion-shaped product, the anisotropic single-crystal-containing microcapsules selectively display-at certain orientations but not others-one of the distinct colors from the various crystal planes.Entities:
Keywords: colloidal crystals; microcapsules; microfluidics; photonic crystals; single crystals
Year: 2019 PMID: 30873667 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201900693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849