Abstract
ABSTRACTWe report the shear-induced assembly of graphene oxide (GO) particles into periodic stripe-like patterns near the surface. These stripe-like patterns, which have an average periodic length of 100–250 μm, are aligned in a wavy manner along the normal to the flow direction. The self-assembled GO structures are investigated at different depths using three different analysis methods, namely, reflective microscopy observations of the photonic-crystalline GO dispersion, polarized optical microscopy, and fluorescence confocal laser scanning microscopy. The surface microstructures observed in reflection mode are different from the shear-induced band structures formed in bulk thermotropic liquid crystals and liquid crystal polymers, in terms of the shape and scale of the stripes. Further, there is also a difference in terms of the dependence of the stripe width on the shear rate. The observations suggest that the stripes are formed because of a competition between the stable surface-field-induced planar alignment of the GO particles near the surface and their relatively unstable shear-induced vertical alignment in the bulk. The findings of this study should advance our understanding of GO assembly under shear stress. Further, the proposed method is a novel one for inducing the assembly of GO particles into microstructures shaped as thread-like stripes.
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