Magnetic coupling in colloidal clusters for hierarchical self-assembly
Joe G Donaldson, Peter Schall, Laura Rossi

TL;DR
This paper presents a scalable method to create magnetic colloidal building blocks from available particles, enabling hierarchical self-assembly into complex structures like Archimedean lattices, with structure reproducibility influenced by particle shape.
Contribution
It introduces a simple, scalable process to produce magnetic colloids for self-assembly, demonstrating shape-dependent magnetic properties and formation of complex lattice structures.
Findings
Spherical particles produce consistent magnetic configurations.
Cubic particles exhibit frustrated magnetic states.
Clusters of three particles form complex Archimedean lattices.
Abstract
Manipulating the way in which colloidal particles self-organise is a central challenge in the design of functional soft materials. Meeting this challenge requires the use of building blocks that interact with one another in a highly specific manner. Their fabrication, however, is limited by the complexity of the available synthesis procedures. Here, we demonstrate that, starting from experimentally available magnetic colloids, we can create a variety of complex building blocks suitable for hierarchical self-organisation using a simple scalable process. Using computer simulations, we compress spherical and cubic magnetic colloids in spherical confinement, and investigate their suitability to form small clusters with reproducible structural and magnetic properties. We find that, while the structure of these clusters is highly reproducible, their magnetic character depends on the particle…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization
