Self-Assembly of Colloidal Diamond
Invited
Abstract
Self-assembling colloidal cubic diamond been a longstanding goal because of its potential for making materials with a photonic band gap. These materials suppress spontaneous emission and have applications in micro photonics such as optical waveguides, filters, and laser resonators. Cubic diamond s preferred over more easily self-assembled structures such as face-centered cubic (FCC) because diamond has a much wider band gap and is less sensitive to imperfections. The band gap in diamond crystals opens up for a refractive index contrast of about 2.0, which means that a photonic band gap could be achieved using known materials at optical frequencies, which appears not to be possible for FCC crystals. Nevertheless, self-assembled colloidal diamond has not previously been realized. Because particles in a diamond lattice are tetrahedrally coordinated, one approach has been to self-assemble spherical particles with tetrahedral sticky patches. Difficulties persist, however, because patchy spheres possess no mechanism to select the proper staggered orientation of tetrahedral bonds on nearest-neighbor particles, a requirement for cubic diamond. We show that by synthesizing partially compressed tetrahedral clusters with retracted sticky patches, colloidal cubic diamond can be self-assembled using patch-patch adhesion in combination with a steric interlock mechanism that selects the proper staggered bond orientation. Colloidal particles in the self-assembled cubic diamond structure are highly constrained and mechanically stable, which make it possible to dry the suspension and retain the diamond structure. This makes these structures suitable as templates for forming high-dielectric-contrast photonic crystals with cubic diamond symmetry. Photonic band structure calculations reveal that the direct and inverse lattices exhibit promising optical properties, including a wide complete photonic band gap.
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Presenters
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David Pine
New York Univ NYU, Physics, NYU
Authors
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David Pine
New York Univ NYU, Physics, NYU
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Mingxin He
New York Univ NYU
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Johnathon Gales
New York Univ NYU
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Étienne Ducrot
New York Univ NYU
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Zhe Gong
New York Univ NYU, New York University
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Gi-Ra Yi
Chemical Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University
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Stefano Sacanna
New York Univ NYU, New York University