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Single-component quasicrystalline nanocrystal superlattices through flexible polygon tiling rule
Author(s) -
Yasutaka Nagaoka,
Hua Zhu,
Dennis Eggert,
Ou Chen
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aav0790
Subject(s) - polygon (computer graphics) , anisotropy , component (thermodynamics) , superlattice , tessellation (computer graphics) , tetrahedron , nanocrystal , nanoscopic scale , materials science , quasicrystal , computational science , transmission electron microscopy , electron tomography , crystallography , statistical physics , computer science , nanotechnology , condensed matter physics , physics , scanning transmission electron microscopy , computer graphics (images) , optics , chemistry , frame (networking) , telecommunications , thermodynamics
Quasicrystalline superlattices (QC-SLs) generated from single-component colloidal building blocks have been predicted by computer simulations but are challenging to reproduce experimentally. We discovered that 10-fold QC-SLs could self-organize from truncated tetrahedral quantum dots with anisotropic patchiness. Transmission electron microscopy and tomography measurements allow structural reconstruction of the QC-SL from the nanoscale packing to the atomic-scale orientation alignments. The unique QC order leads to a tiling concept, the "flexible polygon tiling rule," that replicates the experimental observations. The keys for the single-component QC-SL formation were identified to be the anisotropic shape and patchiness of the building blocks and the assembly microscopic environment. Our discovery may spur the creation of various superstructures using anisotropic objects through an enthalpy-driven route.

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