Abstract
Materials made by directed self-assembly of colloids can exhibit a rich spectrum of optical phenomena, including photonic bandgaps, coherent scattering, collective plasmonic resonance, and wave guiding. The assembly of colloidal particles with spatial selectivity is critical for studying these phenomena and for practical device fabrication. While there are well-established techniques for patterning colloidal crystals, these often require multiple steps including the fabrication of a physical template for masking, etching, stamping, or directing dewetting. Here, the direct-writing of colloidal suspensions is presented as a technique for fabrication of iridescent colloidal crystals in arbitrary 2D patterns. Leveraging the principles of convective assembly, the process can be optimized for high writing speeds (≈600 µm s-1 ) at mild process temperature (30 °C) while maintaining long-range (cm-scale) order in the colloidal crystals. The crystals exhibit structural color by grating diffraction, and analysis of diffraction allows particle size, relative grain size, and grain orientation to be deduced. The effect of write trajectory on particle ordering is discussed and insights for developing 3D printing techniques for colloidal crystals via layer-wise printing and sintering are provided.
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