Metallization of colloidal crystals
Ali Ehlen, Hector Lopez-Rios, and Monica Olvera de la Cruz

TL;DR
This study investigates the transition to a metal-like phase in colloidal crystals formed by binary nanoparticles, analyzing how composition and temperature influence structural and electronic properties, revealing first-order delocalization transitions and stability factors.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized molecular dynamics model to analyze sublattice delocalization in colloidal crystals, highlighting the roles of particle ratio and grafted chains in phase stability and transitions.
Findings
Identifies primary role of particle ratio in determining crystal type.
Observes first-order sublattice delocalization transitions with temperature increase.
Finds stability minima at specific particle ratios indicating favored compound structures.
Abstract
Colloidal crystals formed by size-asymmetric binary particles co-assemble into a wide variety of colloidal compounds with lattices akin to ionic crystals. Recently, a transition from a compound phase with a sublattice of small particles to a metal-like phase in which the small particles are delocalized has been predicted computationally and observed experimentally. In this colloidal metallic phase, the small particles roam the crystal maintaining the integrity of the lattice of large particles, as electrons do in metals. A similar transition also occurs in superionic crystals, termed sublattice melting. Here, we use energetic principles and a generalized molecular dynamics model of a binary system of functionalized nanoparticles to analyze the transition to sublattice delocalization in different co-assembled crystal phases as a function of T, number of grafted chains on the small…
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