Binary icosahedral clusters of hard spheres in spherical confinement

Publication date

2020-08-31

Authors

Wang, DaISNI 0000000492960155
Dasgupta, TonnishthaISNI 0000000518036658
van der Wee, Ernest BenjaminISNI 000000049322888X
Zanaga, Daniele
Altantzis, ThomasISNI 0000000512489496
Wu, Yaoting
Coli, Gabriele M.ISNI 0000000518030459
Murray, Christopher B.
Bals, Sara
Dijkstra, MarjoleinISNI 0000000358257928

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

The influence of geometry on the local and global packing of particles is important to many fundamental and applied research themes, such as the structure and stability of liquids, crystals and glasses. Here we show by experiments and simulations that a binary mixture of hard-sphere-like nanoparticles crystallizing into a MgZn2 Laves phase in bulk spontaneously forms icosahedral clusters in slowly drying droplets. Using advanced electron tomography, we are able to obtain the real-space coordinates of all the spheres in the icosahedral clusters of up to about 10,000 particles. The local structure of 70–80% of the particles became similar to that of the MgCu2 Laves phase. These observations are important for photonic applications. In addition, we observed in simulations that the icosahedral clusters nucleated away from the spherical boundary, which is distinctly different from that of the single species clusters. Our findings open the way for particle-level studies of nucleation and growth of icosahedral clusters, and of binary crystallization.

Keywords

Colloids, Nanoparticles, Self-assembly, Statistical physics, Transmission electron microscopy, Taverne, General Physics and Astronomy

Citation

Wang, D, Dasgupta, T, van der Wee, E B, Zanaga, D, Altantzis, T, Wu, Y, Coli, G M, Murray, C B, Bals, S, Dijkstra, M & van Blaaderen, A 2020, 'Binary icosahedral clusters of hard spheres in spherical confinement', Nature Physics, vol. 17, no. 1, pp. 128-134. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-020-1003-9