Abstract

We studied the evaporation-induced formation of supraparticles from dispersions of elongated colloidal particles using experiments and computer simulations. Aqueous droplets containing a dispersion of ellipsoidal and spherical polystyrene particles were dried on superamphiphobic surfaces at different humidity values that led to varying evaporation rates. Supraparticles made from only ellipsoidal particles showed short-range lateral ordering at the supraparticle surface and random orientations in the interior regardless of the evaporation rate. Particle-based simulations corroborated the experimental observations in the evaporation-limited regime and showed an increase in the local nematic ordering as the diffusion-limited regime was reached. A thin shell of ellipsoids was observed at the surface when supraparticles were made from binary mixtures of ellipsoids and spheres. Image analysis revealed that the supraparticle porosity increased with an increasing aspect ratio of the ellipsoids.

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