36 research outputs found
Tracing the Surfactant-Mediated Nucleation, Growth, and Superpacking of Gold Supercrystals Using Time and Spatially Resolved X‑ray Scattering
The
nucleation and growth process of gold supercrystals in a surfactant
diffusion approach is followed by simultaneous small- and wide-angle
X-ray scattering (SAXS/WAXS), supplemented with scanning electron
microscopy. The results indicate that supercrystal nucleation can
be activated efficiently upon placing a concentrated surfactant solution
of a nematic phase on top of a gold nanocrystal solution droplet trapped
in the middle of a vertically oriented capillary tube. Supercrystal nuclei comprised of tens of gold
nanocubes are observed nearly instantaneously in the broadened liquid–liquid
interface zone of a steep gradient of surfactant concentration, revealing
a diffusion-kinetics-controlled nucleation process. Once formed, the
nuclei can sediment into the naoncrystal zone below, and grow efficiently
into cubic or tetragonal supercrystals of ∼1 μm size
within ∼100 min. Supercrystals matured during sedimentation
in the capillary can accumulate and face-to-face align at the bottom
liquid–air interface of the nanocrystal droplet. This is followed
by superpacking of the supercrystals into highly oriented hierarchical
sheets, with a huge number of gold nanocubes aligned for largely coherent
crystallographic orientations