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research article

Control of Buckling of Colloidal Supraparticles

Roemling, Lukas J.
•
De Angelis, Gaia  
•
Mauch, Annika
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May 2, 2025
Small

The properties of clusters of colloidal particles, often termed supraparticles, are determined by the arrangement of the primary particles. Therefore, controlling the structure formation process is of key importance. While buckled morphologies can result from fast drying kinetics as found in spray drying, controlling the morphology under slow drying conditions remains a challenge. The final morphology of a supraparticle formed from an emulsion droplet can be controlled by manipulating particle–surfactant interactions. Water/oil emulsions are used to template supraparticle formation. The interactions of negatively charged colloidal particles with the surfactants stabilizing the water/oil‐interface are tailored via the local pH within the aqueous droplet. At low pH, protonation of the anionic headgroup of the surfactant decreases electrostatic repulsion of the particles, facilitates interfacial adsorption, and subsequently causes buckling. The local pH of the aqueous droplet phase continuously changes during the assembly process. The supraparticle formation pathway can therefore be controlled by determining the point in time at which interfacial adsorption is enabled by adjusting the initial pH. Consequently, the final supraparticle morphology can be tailored at will, from fully buckled structures, via undulated surface morphologies to spherically rough and spherically smooth supraparticles and crystalline colloidal clusters.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/smll.202411772
Author(s)
Roemling, Lukas J.

Friedrich‐Alexander‐Universität Erlangen‐Nürnberg Institute of Interfaces and Particle Technology 91058 Erlangen Germany

De Angelis, Gaia  

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

Mauch, Annika

Friedrich‐Alexander‐Universität Erlangen‐Nürnberg Institute of Interfaces and Particle Technology 91058 Erlangen Germany

Amstad, Esther  

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

Vogel, Nicolas

Friedrich‐Alexander‐Universität Erlangen‐Nürnberg Institute of Interfaces and Particle Technology 91058 Erlangen Germany

Date Issued

2025-05-02

Publisher

Wiley

Published in
Small
Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SMAL  
FunderFunding(s)Grant NumberGrant URL

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Project‐ID 416229255 – SFB 1411

Available on Infoscience
May 6, 2025
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/249851
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