Abstract

In recent years the concept of "colloidal devices" has emerged. These include colloidal crystals with photonics properties, as well as displays, machines, and other assemblies having a particular purpose. The assembly of colloidal devices, or even simpler assemblies, can proceed with top-down approaches, applied fields, bottom-up approaches, or combinations of these. Bottom-up assembly, in which the particles have "colloidal force information" encoded chemically on their surfaces and interiors, appears to be especially suited for larger-scale production. The encoded information directs how the particles assemble and function, and a simple example is a colloidal crystal that has purely repulsive forces between all the particles. A richer assembly process can occur with site-specific chemistry, which sometimes occurs naturally on particles, such as when a particle has two different crystal faces. And in recent years, researchers have developed techniques for intentionally placing site-specific chemistry on particles, enabling assembly to proceed through localized electrostatic, van der Waals, depletion, hydrophobic, and receptor-ligand forces. Site-specific colloidal forces are useful in effecting colloidal and nanocolloidal assembly for state-of-the-art and future structures and devices.

Keywords

van der Waals forceNanotechnologyColloidColloidal crystalColloidal particleSelf-assemblyParticle (ecology)Materials scienceChemical physicsChemistryMolecule

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
1
Issue
1
Pages
012502-012502
Citations
34
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Darrell Velegol (2007). Assembling colloidal devices by controlling interparticle forces. Journal of Nanophotonics , 1 (1) , 012502-012502. https://doi.org/10.1117/1.2759184

Identifiers

DOI
10.1117/1.2759184