Impurity-induced defects play a crucial role for the properties of crystals, but little is known about impurities with anisotropic shape. Here, we study how colloidal dumbbells distort and interact with a hexagonal crystal of charged colloidal spheres at a fluid interface. We find that subtle differences in the dumbbell length determine whether it induces a local distortion of the lattice or traps a dislocation, and determine how the dumbbell moves inside the repulsive hexagonal lattice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe employ a system of cubic colloids with rounded corners to study the close-packed monolayers that form via convective assembly. We show that by controlled solvent evaporation large densely packed monolayers of colloidal cubes are obtained. Using scanning electron microscopy and particle-tracking algorithms, we investigate the local order in detail and show that the obtained monolayers possess their predicted close-packed optimal packings, the Λ-lattice and the Λ-lattice, as well as the simple square-lattice and disordered packings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe miniaturization of machines towards the micron and nanoscale requires the development of joint-like elements that enable and constrain motion. We present a facile method to create colloidal joints, that is, anisotropic colloidal particles functionalized with surface mobile DNA linkers that control the motion range of bonded particles. We demonstrate quantitatively that we can control the flexibility of these colloidal joints by tuning the DNA linker concentration in the bond area.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurface morphology is a tool to tune physical properties of colloidal suspensions such as the wettability, viscoelasticity, and depletion attractions. Existing synthesis methods to obtain colloids with a rough surface morphology often result in colloids with nontunable surface properties. Here, we developed a synthetic approach to obtain both spherical and shape-anisotropic hybrid colloids with tunable surface morphology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe key ingredients to the successful bottom-up construction of complex materials are believed to be colloids with anisotropic shapes and directional, or patchy, interactions. We present an approach for creating such anisotropic patchy particles based on reconfiguring randomly shaped aggregates of colloidal spheres. While colloidal aggregates are often undesirable in colloidal dispersions due to their random shapes, we exploit them as a starting point to synthesize patchy particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a study of the structure and rheology of mixed suspensions of montmorillonite clay platelets and Ludox TMA silica spheres at pH 5, 7, and 9. Using cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM), we probe the changes in the structure of the montmorillonite suspensions induced by changing the pH and by adding silica particles. Using oscillatory and transient rheological measurements, we examine the changes in storage modulus and yield stress of the montmorillonite suspensions upon changing the pH and adding silica particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a study on the macroscopic, microscopic, and rheological behavior of mixtures of natural hectorite clay and different types of anionic Ludox silica spheres. Adding silica spheres to the weak hectorite gels leads the collapse of the suspensions, while the strong gels remain space-filling, though their storage modulus and the yield stress values diminish. We discuss what kind of structural rearrangements are possibly responsible for the macroscopic and rheological changes in the clay/silica mixtures.
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