Issue 27, 2023

Porous crystals in charged sphere suspensions by aggregate-driven phase separation

Abstract

The kinetics of phase transition processes often governs the resulting material microstructure. Using optical microscopy, we here investigate the formation and stabilization of a porous crystalline microstructure forming in low-salt suspensions of charged colloidal spheres containing aggregates comprising some 5–10 of these colloids. We observe the transformation of an initially crystalline colloidal solid with homogeneously incorporated aggregates to individual, compositionally refined crystallites of perforated morphology coexisting with an aggregate-enriched fluid phase filling the holes and separating individual crystallites. A preliminary kinetic characterization suggests that the involved processes follow power laws. We show that this route to porous materials is neither restricted to nominally single component systems nor to a particular microstructure to start from. However, it necessitates an early rapid solidification stage during which the aggregates become trapped in the bulk of the host-crystals. The thermodynamic stability of the reconstructed crystalline scaffold against melting under increased salinity was found comparable to that of pure phase crystallites grown very slowly from a melt. Future implications of this novel route to porous colloidal crystals are discussed.

Graphical abstract: Porous crystals in charged sphere suspensions by aggregate-driven phase separation

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 May 2023
Accepted
22 Jun 2023
First published
27 Jun 2023

Soft Matter, 2023,19, 5076-5091

Porous crystals in charged sphere suspensions by aggregate-driven phase separation

N. Lorenz, C. Wittenberg and T. Palberg, Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 5076 DOI: 10.1039/D3SM00660C

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