Assembly of Silica Particles at Free Standing Smectic-A Films

ORAL

Abstract

The ability of liquid crystals (LCs) to organize particles into regular structures provides novel routes to control ordering transitions, with the possibility of building complex artificial structures for diverse applications. Since LCs are readily reconfigurable, they offer opportunities to make responsive devices including smart energy-efficient windows, responsive optical components, and sensors. Furthermore, colloidal particles at complex fluid interfaces and within films assemble to form ordered structures via interactions that include capillarity, elasticity, and other fields. Here we study microparticle interactions within free-standing smectic-A films, in which the elasticity arising from the director field distortion and capillary interactions arising from interface deformation compete to direct the assembly of particles. New colloidal assemblies and patterns, ranging from 1D chains to 2D aggregates, sensitive to the initial wetting conditions of particles at the smectic film, are reported. This work paves the way to exploiting LC interfaces as a means to direct spontaneously formed, reconfigurable, and optically active materials.

*National Science Foundation (NSF) through Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers Grant DMR-1120901 and NSF Grant DMR-1262047.

Presenters

  • Mohamed Amine Amine Gharbi

    • University of Massachusetts Boston

Authors

  • Mohamed Amine Amine Gharbi

    • University of Massachusetts Boston
  • Daniel Beller

    • Department of Physics, University of California, Merced
    • University of California Merced
  • Nima Sharifi-Mood

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Rohini Gupta

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Randall D Kamien

    • Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania
    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Shu Yang

    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania
    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Kathleen Stebe

    • University of Pennsylvania
    • Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Pennsylvania