Defects in Self Assembled Colloidal Crystals
Author(s)
Koh, Yaw Koon; Teh, L. K.; Wong, Chee Cheong
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Colloidal self assembly is an efficient method for making 3-D ordered nanostructures suitable for materials such as photonic crystals and macroscopic solids for catalysis and sensor applications. Colloidal crystals grown by convective methods exhibit defects on two different scales. Macro defects such as cracks and void bands originate from the dynamics of meniscus motion during colloidal crystal growth while micro defects like vacancies, dislocation and stacking faults are indigenous to the colloidal crystalline structure. This paper analyses the crystallography and energetics of the microscopic defects from the point of view of classical thermodynamics and discusses the strategy for the control of the macroscopic defects through optimization of the liquid-vapor interface.
Date issued
2005-01Series/Report no.
Advanced Materials for Micro- and Nano-Systems (AMMNS);
Keywords
Colloidal self assembly, macroporous solids, photonic crystal, defects