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Two-Dimensional Nucleation on the Terrace of Colloidal Crystals with Added Polymers
Understanding nucleation dynamics
is important both fundamentally and technologically in materials science
and other scientific fields. Two-dimensional (2D) nucleation is the
predominant growth mechanism in colloidal crystallization, in which
the particle interaction is attractive, and has recently been regarded
as a promising method to fabricate varieties of complex nanostructures
possessing innovative functionality. Here, polymers are added to a
colloidal suspension to generate a depletion attractive force, and
the detailed 2D nucleation process on the terrace of the colloidal
crystals is investigated. In the system, we first measured the nucleation
rate at various area fractions of particles on the terrace, Ï•<sub>area</sub>. In situ observations at single-particle resolution revealed
that nucleation behavior follows the framework of classical nucleation
theory (CNT), such as single-step nucleation pathway and existence
of critical size. Characteristic nucleation behavior is observed in
that the nucleation and growth stage are clearly differentiated. When
many nuclei form in a small area of the terrace, a high density of
kink sites of once formed islands makes growth more likely to occur
than further nucleation because nucleation has a higher energy barrier
than growth. The steady-state homogeneous 2D nucleation rate, <i>J</i>, and the critical size of nuclei, <i>r</i>*,
are measured by in situ observations based on the CNT, which enable
us to obtain the step free energy, γ, which is an important
parameter for characterizing the nucleation process. The γ value
is found to change according to the strength of attraction, which
is tuned by the concentration of the polymer as a depletant