Defect migration in supercrystalline nanocomposites
Dmitry Lapkin, Cong Yan, Emre G\"ursoy, Hadas Sternlicht, Alexander Plunkett, B\"usra Bor, Young Yong Kim, Dameli Assalauova, Fabian Westermeier, Michael Sprung, Tobias Krekeler, Surya Snata Rout, Martin Ritter, Satishkumar Kulkarni, Thomas F. Keller, Gerold A. Schneider

TL;DR
This paper investigates how processing steps affect defect behavior in supercrystalline nanocomposites, revealing defect migration, interaction, and healing mechanisms that influence their mechanical properties.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into defect dynamics in SCNCs during processing, combining microscopy and simulations to understand defect evolution at the nanoscale.
Findings
Pressing distorts superlattice structure.
Heat treatment causes stacking fault migration and healing.
Defect rearrangements improve mechanical strength.
Abstract
Supercrystalline nanocomposites (SCNCs) are nanostructured hybrid materials with unique emergent functional properties. Given their periodically arranged building blocks, they also offer interesting parallelisms with crystalline materials. They can be processed in multiple forms and at different scales, and crosslinking their organic ligands via heat treatment leads to a remarkable boost of their mechanical properties. This study shows, via X-ray and in-situ scanning transmission (STEM) electron microscopy analyses, how each of these processing steps plays a distinct role in the generation, migration, interaction and healing of supercrystalline defects. Pressing of SCNCs into bulk pellets leads to a distortion of the otherwise fcc superlattice, while emulsion-templated self-assembly yields supraparticles (SPs) with stacking faults and size-dependent symmetries. Interestingly, heat…
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