Abstract

In this study, the effect of centrifugal force on the assembly and crystallization of binary colloidal mixtures is demonstrated. Monolithic pieces have been prepared which are characterized by a structural gradient along the direction of the centrifugal force. For a given number ratio of monodisperse 154 and 300 nm latex spheres, the absolute latex concentration was varied and with it the sedimentation velocity of the individual particle species. For three different concentrations it has been demonstrated that the structure of the binary colloidal assembly obtained after centrifugation is affected significantly. For the largest initial latex absolute concentrations, the structural variation along the packed latex column in the ultracentrifuge tube is minimal, while a decrease in the absolute concentrations leads to crystalline packing in defined regions of the column. The observation of the thermodynamically favored structure resembling NaCl, but also of the aluminum boride AlB2 analog as well as unordered, glass-like packing depending on the mutual latex concentration under unchanged particle number and size ratio, shows that by centrifugation kinetically favored states can be realized. This result implies that centrifugation of binary latex mixtures is a promising route for investigating the self-organization of binary colloidal systems since the sedimentation velocities of the two particle species are different, and thus the local concentrations and mixing ratios vary continuously also enabling rare packing motifs.

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