Issue 42, 2019

Preparation of colloidal molecules with temperature-tunable interactions from oppositely charged microgel spheres

Abstract

The self-assembly of small colloidal clusters, so-called colloidal molecules, into crystalline materials has proven extremely challenging, the outcome often being glassy, amorphous states where positions and orientations are locked. In this paper, a new type of colloidal molecule is therefore prepared, assembled from poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM)-based microgels that due to their well documented softness and temperature-response allow for greater defect tolerance compared to hard spheres and for convenient in situ tuning of size, volume fraction and inter-particle interactions with temperature. The microgels (B) are assembled by electrostatic adsorption onto oppositely charged, smaller-sized microgels (A), where the relative size of the two determines the valency (n) of the resulting core–satellite ABn-type colloidal molecules. Following assembly, a microfluidic deterministic lateral displacement (DLD) device is used to effectively isolate AB4-type colloidal molecules of tetrahedral geometry that possess a repulsive-to-attractive transition on crossing the microgels' volume phase transition temperature (VPTT). These soft, temperature-responsive colloidal molecules constitute highly promising building blocks for the preparation of new materials with emergent properties, and their optical wavelength-size makes them especially interesting for optical applications.

Graphical abstract: Preparation of colloidal molecules with temperature-tunable interactions from oppositely charged microgel spheres

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Sep 2019
Accepted
13 Oct 2019
First published
14 Oct 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2019,15, 8512-8524

Preparation of colloidal molecules with temperature-tunable interactions from oppositely charged microgel spheres

L. K. Månsson, T. de Wild, F. Peng, S. H. Holm, J. O. Tegenfeldt and P. Schurtenberger, Soft Matter, 2019, 15, 8512 DOI: 10.1039/C9SM01779H

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