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      Nanoparticle Shape Influences the Magnetic Response of Ferro-Colloids

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          Abstract

          The interesting magnetic response of conventional ferro-colloid has proved extremely useful in a wide range of technical applications. Furthermore, the use of nano/micro- sized magnetic particles has proliferated cutting-edge medical research, such as drug targeting and hyperthermia. In order to diversify and improve the application of such systems, new avenues of functionality must be explored. Current efforts focus on incorporating directional interactions that are surplus to the intrinsic magnetic one. This additional directionality can be conveniently introduced by considering systems composed of magnetic particles of different shapes. Here we present a combined analytical and simulation study of permanently magnetized dipolar superball particles; a geometry that closely resembles magnetic cubes synthesized in experiments. We have focused on determining the initial magnetic susceptibility of these particles in dilute suspensions, seeking to quantify the effect of the superball shape parameter on the system response. In turn, we linked the computed susceptibilities to the system microstructure by analyzing cluster composition using a connectivity network analysis. Our study has shown that by increasing the shape parameter of these superball particles, one can alter the outcome of self-assembly processes, leading to the observation of an unanticipated decrease in the initial static magnetic susceptibility.

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          Role of Repulsive Forces in Determining the Equilibrium Structure of Simple Liquids

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            Linking synchronization to self-assembly using magnetic Janus colloids.

            Synchronization occurs widely in the natural and technological worlds, from the rhythm of applause and neuron firing to the quantum mechanics of coupled Josephson junctions, but has not been used to produce new spatial structures. Our understanding of self-assembly has evolved independently in the fields of chemistry and materials, and with a few notable exceptions has focused on equilibrium rather than dynamical systems. Here we combine these two phenomena to create synchronization-selected microtubes of Janus colloids, micron-sized spherical particles with different surface chemistry on their opposing hemispheres, which we study using imaging and computer simulation. A thin nickel film coats one hemisphere of each silica particle to generate a discoid magnetic symmetry, such that in a precessing magnetic field its dynamics retain crucial phase freedom. Synchronizing their motion, these Janus spheres self-organize into micrometre-scale tubes in which the constituent particles rotate and oscillate continuously. In addition, the microtube must be tidally locked to the particles, that is, the particles must maintain their orientation within the rotating microtube. This requirement leads to a synchronization-induced structural transition that offers various applications based on the potential to form, disintegrate and fine-tune self-assembled in-motion structures in situ. Furthermore, it offers a generalizable method of controlling structure using dynamic synchronization criteria rather than static energy minimization, and of designing new field-driven microscale devices in which components do not slavishly follow the external field.
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              Chiral colloidal clusters.

              Chirality is an important element of biology, chemistry and physics. Once symmetry is broken and a handedness is established, biochemical pathways are set. In DNA, the double helix arises from the existence of two competing length scales, one set by the distance between monomers in the sugar backbone, and the other set by the stacking of the base pairs. Here we use a colloidal system to explore a simple forcing route to chiral structures. To do so we have designed magnetic colloids that, depending on both their shape and induced magnetization, self-assemble with controlled helicity. We model the two length scales with asymmetric colloidal dumbbells linked by a magnetic belt at their waist. In the presence of a magnetic field the belts assemble into a chain and the steric constraints imposed by the asymmetric spheres force the chain to coil. We show that if the size ratio between the spheres is large enough, a single helicity is adopted, right or left. The realization of chiral colloidal clusters opens up a new link between colloidal science and chemistry. These colloidal clusters may also find use as mesopolymers, as optical and light-activated structures, and as models for enantiomeric separation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ACS Nano
                ACS Nano
                nn
                ancac3
                ACS Nano
                American Chemical Society
                1936-0851
                1936-086X
                01 August 2017
                22 August 2017
                : 11
                : 8
                : 8153-8166
                Affiliations
                []Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna , Boltzmanngasse 5, Vienna 1090, Austria
                []Ural Federal University , Lenin av. 51, Ekaterinburg 620083, Russia
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1021/acsnano.7b03064
                5571469
                28763187
                f9c865bd-b07a-468a-8fe5-05461be2662d
                Copyright © 2017 American Chemical Society

                This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.

                History
                : 03 May 2017
                : 01 August 2017
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                nn7b03064
                nn-2017-03064a

                Nanotechnology
                self-assembly,superballs,dipolar,magnetic susceptibility,clusterization
                Nanotechnology
                self-assembly, superballs, dipolar, magnetic susceptibility, clusterization

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