Frontiers in Physics (Mar 2022)

Transparent Colloidal Crystals With Structural Colours

  • Talha Erdem,
  • Talha Erdem,
  • Thomas O’Neill,
  • Mykolas Zupkauskas,
  • Alessio Caciagli,
  • Peicheng Xu,
  • Peicheng Xu,
  • Yang Lan,
  • Yang Lan,
  • Peter Bösecke,
  • Erika Eiser,
  • Erika Eiser

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2022.847142
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Spatially ordered arrangements of spherical colloids are known to exhibit structural colours. The intensity and brilliance of these structural colours typically improve with colloidal monodispersity, low concentrations of point and line defects and with increasing refractive index contrast between the colloids and the embedding medium. Here we show that suspensions of charge stabilised, fluorinated latex particles with low refractive-index contrast to their aqueous background form Wigner crystals with FCC symmetry for volume fractions between 13 and 40%. In reflection they exhibit both strong, almost angle-independent structural colours and sharp, more brilliant Bragg peaks despite the particle polydispersity and bimodal distribution. Simultaneously, these suspensions appear transparent in transmission. Furthermore, binary AB, A2B and A13B type mixtures of these fluorinated and similarly sized polystyrene particles appeared predominantly white but with clear Bragg peaks indicating a CsCl-like BCC structure and more complex crystals. We characterised the suspensions using a combination of reflectivity measurements and small-angle x-ray scattering, complemented by reflectivity modelling.

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