Advanced Materials Interfaces (Apr 2024)

Optimizing Color Saturation in Colloidal Photonic Crystals by Control of Absorber Amount and Distribution

  • Carina Bittner,
  • Gudrun Bleyer,
  • Nico Nees,
  • Miguel Carneiro,
  • Lukas Pflug,
  • Michael Stingl,
  • Nicolas Vogel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/admi.202300986
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Nanostructured materials that mimic structural coloration in nature can be synthetically created by colloidal self‐assembly. To maximize optical effects, the natural world integrates melanin as a broadband absorber to remove incoherently scattered light. Polydopamine (PDA) is used as a synthetic analog of natural melanin to systematically investigate the influence of absorber quantity and distribution on color saturation in colloidal photonic crystals. The absorbing PDA is integrated into two distinct ways: homogenous colloidal crystals are produced from core–shell particles with incrementally increasing polydopamine shells, and heterogeneous colloidal crystals are formed by co‐assembly of varying ratios of polystyrene (PS) and absorbing PS@PDA particles. The chromaticity is quantified by converting the measured spectra to reconstructed colors in the L*a*b* color sphere to identify structures with optimal color saturation. Simulations based on the discrete dipole approximation (DDA) indicate that a homogeneous absorber distribution is most efficient in creating saturated structural coloration. Experiments, however, demonstrate that the heterogeneous absorber incorporation outperforms the homogeneous strategies, as it allows for a more precise adjustment of the absorber content in the required concentration range. These results underline the importance of incorporating absorbers and indicate efficient ways in which colloidal photonic crystals with saturated structural colors can be prepared.

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