Publication | Open Access
Hierarchical Self-Assembly of Cellulose Nanocrystals in a Confined Geometry
209
Citations
32
References
2016
Year
Materials ScienceHierarchical Self-assemblyColloidal MaterialEngineeringNanomaterialsNanotechnologyMolecular Self-assemblySelf-assemblyCellulose NanocrystalsDifferent Length ScalesSoft MatterPlanar GeometryNanocelluloseBiophysicsHierarchical Assembly
Complex hierarchical architectures are ubiquitous in nature. By designing and controlling the interaction between elementary building blocks, nature is able to optimize a large variety of materials with multiple functionalities. Such control is, however, extremely challenging in man-made materials, due to the difficulties in controlling their interaction at different length scales simultaneously. Here, hierarchical cholesteric architectures are obtained by the self-assembly of cellulose nanocrystals within shrinking, micron-sized aqueous droplets. This confined, spherical geometry drastically affects the colloidal self-assembly process, resulting in concentric ordering within the droplet, as confirmed by simulation. This provides a quantitative tool to study the interactions of cellulose nanocrystals beyond what has been achieved in a planar geometry. Our developed methodology allows us to fabricate truly hierarchical solid-state architectures from the nanometer to the macroscopic scale using a renewable and sustainable biopolymer.
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