Convenient and efficient fabrication of colloidal crystals based on solidification-induced colloidal assembly

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Abstract

The simple yet efficient and versatile fabrication of colloidal crystals was investigated based on the solidification-induced colloidal crystallization process with particle/water suspension as precursor. The resulting colloidal crystals were constituted by crystal grains with sizes ranging from several tens of micrometers to a few millimeters. Each of the grains had a close-hexagonal array of colloids, which endowed the bulk colloidal crystal powders with some specific optical properties. The freezing of water was shown as the major driving force to form colloidal crystal grains, which supersaturated the solution with nanoparticles and thus induced the formation and growth of colloidal crystal seeds. This process is intrinsically different from those conventional methods based on shearing force, surface tension, columbic interaction or magnetic interaction, revealing a new strategy to fabricate colloidal crystals in a convenient and efficient way.

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Shao, T., Sun, L., Yang, C., Ye, X., Chen, S., & Luo, X. (2019). Convenient and efficient fabrication of colloidal crystals based on solidification-induced colloidal assembly. Nanomaterials, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/nano9040575

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