Role of particle aggregation in the structure of dried colloidal silica layers

The process of colloidal drying gives way to particle self-assembly in numerous fields including photonics or biotechnology. Yet, the mechanisms and conditions driving the final particle arrangement in dry colloidal layers remain elusive. Here, we examine how the drying rate selects the nanostructur...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSoft matter Vol. 17; no. 6; pp. 1589 - 16
Main Authors Lesaine, Arnaud, Bonamy, Daniel, Rountree, Cindy L, Gauthier, Georges, Impéror-Clerc, Marianne, Lazarus, Véronique
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Royal Society of Chemistry 19.02.2021
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Summary:The process of colloidal drying gives way to particle self-assembly in numerous fields including photonics or biotechnology. Yet, the mechanisms and conditions driving the final particle arrangement in dry colloidal layers remain elusive. Here, we examine how the drying rate selects the nanostructure of thick dried layers in four different suspensions of silica nanospheres. Depending on particle size and dispersity, either an amorphous arrangement, a crystalline arrangement, or a rate-dependent amorphous-to-crystalline transition occurs at the drying surface. Amorphous arrangements are observed in the two most polydisperse suspensions while crystallinity occurs when dispersity is lower. Counter-intuitively in the latter case, a higher drying rate favors ordering of the particles. To complement these measurements and to take stock of the bulk properties of the layer, tests on the layer porosity were undertaken. For all suspensions studied herein, faster drying yields denser dry layers. Crystalline surface arrangement implies large bulk volume fraction (∼0.65) whereas amorphous arrangements can be observed in layers with either low (down to ∼0.53) or high (∼0.65) volume fraction. Lastly, we demonstrate via targeted additional experiments and SAXS measurements, that the packing structure of the layers is mainly driven by the formation of aggregates and their subsequent packing, and not by the competition between Brownian diffusion and convection. This highlights that a second dimensionless ratio in addition to the Peclet number should be taken into account, namely the aggregation over evaporation timescale. The process of colloidal drying gives way to particle self-assembly in numerous fields including photonics or biotechnology.
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ISSN:1744-683X
1744-6848
DOI:10.1039/d0sm00723d