Shaping micro-clusters via inverse jamming and topographic close-packing of microbombs

Designing topographic clusters is of significant interest, yet it remains challenging as they often lack mobility or deformability. Here we exploit the huge volumetric expansion (up to 3000%) of a new type of building block, thermally expandable microbombs. They consist of a viscoelastic polymeric s...

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Published inNature communications Vol. 8; no. 1; pp. 721 - 9
Main Authors Yu, Seunggun, Cho, Hyesung, Hong, Jun Pyo, Park, Hyunchul, Jolly, Jason Christopher, Kang, Hong Suk, Lee, Jin Hong, Kim, Junsoo, Lee, Seung Hwan, Lee, Albert S, Hong, Soon Man, Park, Cheolmin, Yang, Shu, Koo, Chong Min
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Nature Publishing Group 28.09.2017
Nature Publishing Group UK
Nature Portfolio
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Summary:Designing topographic clusters is of significant interest, yet it remains challenging as they often lack mobility or deformability. Here we exploit the huge volumetric expansion (up to 3000%) of a new type of building block, thermally expandable microbombs. They consist of a viscoelastic polymeric shell and a volatile gas core, which, within structural confinement, create micro-clusters via inverse jamming and topographical close-packing. Upon heating, microbombs anchored in rigid confinement underwent balloon-like blowing up, allowing for dense clusters via soft interplay between viscoelastic shells. Importantly, the confinement is unyielding against the internal pressure of the microbombs, thereby enabling self-assembled clusters, which can be coupled with topographic inscription to introduce structural hierarchy on the clusters. Our strategy provides densely packed yet ultralight clusters with a variety of complex shapes, cleavages, curvatures, and hierarchy. In turn, these clusters will enrich our ability to explore the assemblies of the ever-increasing range of microparticle systems.Self-assembled systems are normally composed of incompressible building blocks, which constrain their space filling efficiency. Yu et al. show programmable, densely packed clusters using thermally expandable soft microparticles, whereby the self-assembling process is realized via a jamming transition.
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ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-017-00538-z