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1.
ACS Nano ; 17(9): 8303-8314, 2023 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37093781

ABSTRACT

We examine the organization and dynamics of binary colloidal monolayers composed of micron-scale silica particles interspersed with smaller-diameter silica particles that serve as minority component impurities. These binary monolayers are prepared at the surface of ionic liquid droplets over a range of size ratios (σ = 0.16-0.66) and are studied with low-dose minimally perturbative scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The high resolution of SEM imaging provides direct tracking of all particle coordinates over time, enabling a complete description of the microscopic state. In these bidisperse size mixtures, particle interactions are nonadditive because interfacial pinning to the droplet surface causes the equators of differently sized particles to lie in separate planes. By varying the size ratio, we control the extent of nonadditivity in order to achieve phase behavior inaccessible to additive 2D systems. Across the range of size ratios, we tune the system from a mobile small-particle phase (σ < 0.24) to an interstitial solid (0.24 < σ < 0.33) and furthermore to a disordered glass (σ > 0.33). These distinct phase regimes are classified through measurements of hexagonal ordering of the large-particle host lattice and the lattice's capacity for small-particle transport. Altogether, we explain these structural and dynamic trends by considering the combined influence of interparticle interactions and the colloidal packing geometry. Our measurements are reproduced in molecular dynamics simulations of 2D nonadditive disks, suggesting an efficient method for describing confined systems with reduced dimensionality representations.

2.
ACS Nano ; 17(6): 5644-5652, 2023 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36912602

ABSTRACT

As a platform for investigating two-dimensional phase separation, we track the structural evolution of block copolymer thin films during thermal annealing with environmentally controlled atomic force microscopy (AFM). Upon thermal annealing, block copolymer films with incommensurate thickness separate into a terraced morphology decorated with holes. With in situ imaging at 200 °C, we follow the continuous progression of terrace formation in a single region of a cylinder-forming poly(styrene-block-methyl methacrylate) thin film, beginning with the disordered morphology on an unpatterned silicon substrate and continuing through nucleation and coarsening stages. Topographic AFM imaging with nanoscale resolution simultaneously captures ensemble hole growth statistics while locally tracking polymer diffusion through measurements of the film thickness. At early times, we observe homogeneous hole nucleation and isotropic growth, with kinetics following the predictions of classical nucleation theory. At later times, however, we find anomalous hole growth which arises due to the combination of Ostwald ripening and coalescence mechanisms. In each case, our real-space observations highlight the importance of hole interactions for determining coarsening kinetics, mediated either through the interconnected phase for Ostwald ripening or through binary collision events for coalescence.

3.
Soft Matter ; 16(41): 9578-9589, 2020 Oct 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32974626

ABSTRACT

We induce and investigate the coarsening and melting dynamics of an initially static nanoparticle colloidal monolayer at an ionic liquid-vacuum interface, driven by a focused, scanning electron beam. Coarsening occurs through grain interface migration and larger-scale motions such as grain rotations, often facilitated by sliding dislocations. The progressive decrease in area fraction that drives melting of the monolayer is explained using an electrowetting model whereby particles at the interface are solvated once their accumulating charge recruits sufficient counterions to subsume the particle. Subject to stochastic particle removal from the monolayer, melting is recapitulated in simulations with a Lennard-Jones potential. This new driving mechanism for colloidal systems, whose dynamical timescales we show can be controlled with the accelerating voltage, opens the possibility to manipulate particle interactions dynamically without need to vary particle intrinsic properties or surface treatments. Furthermore, the decrease in particle size availed by electron imaging presents opportunities to observe force and time scales in a lesser-explored regime intermediate between typical colloidal and molecular systems.

4.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(7): 2624-2629, 2020 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32191469

ABSTRACT

Mn2+ doping of lead halide perovskites has garnered recent interest because it produces stable orange luminescence in tandem with perovskite emission. Here, we observe enhanced Mn2+ luminescence at the edges of Mn2+-doped CsPbCl3 perovskite microplates and suggest an explanation for its origin using the high spatiotemporal resolution of time-resolved cathodoluminescence (TRCL) imaging. We reveal two luminescent decay components that we attribute to two different Mn2+ populations. While each component appears to be present both near the surface and in the bulk, the origin of the intensity variation stems from a higher proportion of the longer lifetime component near the perovskite surface. We suggest that this higher emission is caused by an increased probability of electron-hole recombination on Mn2+ near the perovskite surface due to an increased trap concentration there. This observation suggests that such surface features have yet untapped potential to enhance emissive properties via control of surface-to-volume ratio.

5.
ACS Nano ; 13(10): 11741-11752, 2019 Oct 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31603647

ABSTRACT

Using environmentally controlled, high-speed atomic force microscopy (AFM), we examine dynamic fluctuations of topographically confined poly(styrene-block-methyl methacrylate) (PS-b-PMMA) cylinders. During thermal annealing, fluctuations drive perturbations of the block copolymer (BCP) interface between polymer domains, leading to pattern roughness. Whereas previous investigations have examined roughness in room-temperature and kinetically quenched samples, we directly visualize the dynamics of PS/PMMA interfaces in real space and time at in situ temperatures above the glass transition temperature, Tg. Imaging under these experimentally challenging thermal annealing conditions is critical to understanding the inherent connection between thermal fluctuations and BCP pattern assembly. Through the use of slow-scan-disabled AFM, we dramatically improve the imaging time resolution for tracking polymer dynamics. Fluctuations increase in intensity with temperature and, at high temperatures, become spatially coherent across their confining potential. Additionally, we observe that topographic confinement suppresses fluctuations and correlations in the proximity of the guiding field. In situ imaging at annealing temperatures represents a significant step in capturing the dynamics of chain mobility at BCP interfaces.

6.
Nano Lett ; 17(12): 7717-7723, 2017 12 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29172538

ABSTRACT

The kinetics of directed self-assembly of symmetric PS-b-PMMA diblock copolymer on chemically patterned templates were measured during in situ thermal annealing. Although these chemical guide patterns lead to well-aligned, defect-free lamellar patterns at thermodynamic equilibrium, in practice, challenges remain in understanding and optimizing the kinetic evolution for technological applications. High-speed, environmentally controlled atomic force microscopy imaging was used to track pattern evolution on the time scale of individual microdomain connections in real space and time, allowing the direct visualization of defect healing mechanisms. When we apply this highly general technique to films on chemically patterned substrates, we find that pattern alignment is mediated by a metastable nonbulk morphology unique to these samples, referred to as the "stitch" morphology. We observe diverse and anisotropic mechanisms for the conversion from this morphology to equilibrium lamellar stripes. Directed self-assembly on chemical templates is observed to follow exponential kinetics with an apparent energetic barrier of 360 ± 80 kJ/mol from 210-230 °C, a significant enhancement when compared with ordering rates on unpatterned substrates. Ultimately, from local imaging, we find that the presence of a chemical guiding field causes morphological ordering and lamellar alignment to occur irreversibly.

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