Self Assembly of Soft Matter Quasicrystals and Their Approximants
Christopher R. Iacovella, Aaron S. Keys, Sharon C. Glotzer

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a simple, entropy-driven design strategy for assembling soft matter quasicrystals and approximants using particle shape and surface functionalization, supported by computer simulations and free energy calculations.
Contribution
It introduces an alternative entropy-based approach for assembling quasicrystals based on shape and surface features, simplifying previous interaction-potential methods.
Findings
Successful assembly of quasicrystals in three model systems.
Mobile surface entities and shape polydispersity promote quasicrystal formation.
The strategy is applicable to nano- and micro-scale assemblies.
Abstract
The surprising recent discoveries of quasicrystals and their approximants in soft matter systems poses the intriguing possibility that these structures can be realized in a broad range of nano- and micro-scale assemblies. It has been theorized that soft matter quasicrystals and approximants are largely entropically stabilized, but the thermodynamic mechanism underlying their formation remains elusive. Here, we use computer simulation and free energy calculations to demonstrate a simple design heuristic for assembling quasicrystals and approximants in soft matter systems. Our study builds on previous simulation studies of the self-assembly of dodecagonal quasicrystals and approximants in minimal systems of spherical particles with complex, highly-specific interaction potentials. We demonstrate an alternative entropy-based approach for assembling dodecagonal quasicrystals and approximants…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPaleontology and Evolutionary Biology · Supramolecular Self-Assembly in Materials · Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization
