Frank Smallenburg
University of Düsseldorf
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Featured researches published by Frank Smallenburg.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Daniela J. Kraft; Ran Ni; Frank Smallenburg; Michiel Hermes; Kisun Yoon; David A. Weitz; Alfons van Blaaderen; Jan Groenewold; Marjolein Dijkstra; Willem K. Kegel
Colloidal particles with site-specific directional interactions, so called “patchy particles”, are promising candidates for bottom-up assembly routes towards complex structures with rationally designed properties. Here we present an experimental realization of patchy colloidal particles based on material independent depletion interaction and surface roughness. Curved, smooth patches on rough colloids are shown to be exclusively attractive due to their different overlap volumes. We discuss in detail the case of colloids with one patch that serves as a model for molecular surfactants both with respect to their geometry and their interactions. These one-patch particles assemble into clusters that resemble surfactant micelles with the smooth and attractive sides of the colloids located at the interior. We term these clusters “colloidal micelles”. Direct Monte Carlo simulations starting from a homogeneous state give rise to cluster size distributions that are in good agreement with those found in experiments. Important differences with surfactant micelles originate from the colloidal character of our model system and are investigated by simulations and addressed theoretically. Our new “patchy” model system opens up the possibility for self-assembly studies into finite-sized superstructures as well as crystals with as of yet inaccessible structures.
Nature Physics | 2013
Frank Smallenburg; Francesco Sciortino
Patchy colloidal systems consist of particles with attractive patches on them. If the bonds between particles are allowed to be flexible, a colloidal liquid state may be observed as the system approaches zero temperature.
Nature Materials | 2015
Bart de Nijs; Simone Dussi; Frank Smallenburg; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Dirk J. Groenendijk; Laura Filion; Arnout Imhof; Alfons van Blaaderen; Marjolein Dijkstra
Icosahedral symmetry, which is not compatible with truly long-range order, can be found in many systems, such as liquids, glasses, atomic clusters, quasicrystals and virus-capsids. To obtain arrangements with a high degree of icosahedral order from tens of particles or more, interparticle attractive interactions are considered to be essential. Here, we report that entropy and spherical confinement suffice for the formation of icosahedral clusters consisting of up to 100,000 particles. Specifically, by using real-space measurements on nanometre- and micrometre-sized colloids, as well as computer simulations, we show that tens of thousands of hard spheres compressed under spherical confinement spontaneously crystallize into icosahedral clusters that are entropically favoured over the bulk face-centred cubic crystal structure. Our findings provide insights into the interplay between confinement and crystallization and into how these are connected to the formation of icosahedral structures.
Nature Physics | 2014
Frank Smallenburg; Laura Filion; Francesco Sciortino
One of the most controversial hypotheses for explaining the origin of the thermodynamic anomalies characterizing liquid water postulates the presence of a metastable second-order liquid-liquid critical point [1] located in the “no-man’s land” [2]. In this scenario, two liquids with distinct local structure emerge near the critical temperature. Unfortunately, since spontaneous crystallization is rapid in this region, experimental support for this hypothesis relies on significant extrapolations, either from the metastable liquid or from amorphous solid water [3, 4]. Although the liquid-liquid transition is expected to feature in many tetrahedrally coordinated liquids, including silicon [5], carbon [6] and silica, even numerical studies of atomic and molecular models have been unable to conclusively prove the existence of this transition. Here we provide such evidence for a model in which it is possible to continuously tune the softness of the interparticle interaction and the flexibility of the bonds, the key ingredients controlling the existence of the critical point. We show that conditions exist where the full coexistence is thermodynamically stable with respect to crystallization. Our work offers a basis for designing colloidal analogues of water exhibiting liquid-liquid transitions in equilibrium, opening the way for experimental confirmation of the original hypothesis.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Frank Smallenburg; Laura Filion; Matthieu Marechal; Marjolein Dijkstra
We examine the effect of vacancies on the phase behavior and structure of systems consisting of hard cubes using event-driven molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations. We find a first-order phase transition between a fluid and a simple cubic crystal phase that is stabilized by a surprisingly large number of vacancies, reaching a net vacancy concentration of approximately 6.4% near bulk coexistence. Remarkably, we find that vacancies increase the positional order in the system. Finally, we show that the vacancies are delocalized and therefore hard to detect.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Frank Smallenburg; Francesco Sciortino
We propose a simple extension of the well known ST2 model for water [F. H. Stillinger and A. Rahman, J. Chem. Phys. 60, 1545 (1974)] that allows for a continuous modification of the hydrogen-bond angular flexibility. We show that the bond flexibility affects the relative thermodynamic stability of the liquid and of the hexagonal (or cubic) ice. On increasing the flexibility, the liquid-liquid critical point, which in the original ST2 model is located in the no-mans land (i.e., the region where ice is the thermodynamically stable phase) progressively moves to a temperature where the liquid is more stable than ice. Our study definitively proves that the liquid-liquid transition in the ST2 model is a genuine phenomenon, of high relevance in all tetrahedral network-forming liquids, including water.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2012
Frank Smallenburg; Hanumantha Rao Vutukuri; Arnout Imhof; Alfons van Blaaderen; Marjolein Dijkstra
Colloidal particles with a dielectric constant (magnetic susceptibility) mismatch with the surrounding solvent acquire a dipole moment in a homogeneous external electric (magnetic) field. The resulting dipolar interactions can lead to aggregation of the particles into string-like clusters. Recently, several methods have been developed to make these structures permanent. However, especially when multiple particle sizes and/or more complex shapes than single spheres are used, the parameter space for these experiments is enormous. We therefore use Monte Carlo simulations to investigate the structure of the self-assembled string-like aggregates in binary mixtures of dipolar hard and charged spheres, as well as dipolar hard asymmetric dumbbells. Binary mixtures of spheres aggregate in different types of clusters depending on the size ratio of the spheres. For highly asymmetric systems, the small spheres form ring-like and flame-like clusters around strings of large spheres, while for size ratios closer to 1, alternating strings of both large and small spheres are observed. For asymmetric dumbbells, we investigate both the effect of size ratio and dipole moment ratio, leading to a large variety of cluster shapes, including chiral clusters.
ACS Nano | 2014
Lorenzo Rovigatti; Frank Smallenburg; Flavio Romano; Francesco Sciortino
Using state-of-the-art numerical techniques, we show that, upon lowering the temperature, tetravalent DNA nanostars form a thermodynamically stable, fully bonded equilibrium gel. In contrast to atomic and molecular network formers, in which the disordered liquid is always metastable with respect to some crystalline phase, we find that the DNA nanostar gel has a lower free energy than the diamond crystal structure in a wide range of concentrations. This unconventional behavior, here verified for the first time in a realistic model, arises from the large arm flexibility of the DNA nanostars, a property that can be tuned by design. Our results confirm the thermodynamic stability of the recently experimentally realized DNA hydrogels.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013
Zdenek Preisler; Teun Vissers; Frank Smallenburg; Gianmarco Munaò; Francesco Sciortino
We numerically calculate the equilibrium phase diagram of one-patch particles with 30% patch coverage. It has been previously shown that in the fluid phase these particles organize into extremely long tubelike aggregates (G. Munaò et al. Soft Matter 2013, 9, 2652). Here, we demonstrate by means of free-energy calculations that such a disordered tube phase, despite forming spontaneously from the fluid phase below a density-dependent temperature, is always metastable against a lamellar crystal. We also show that a crystal of infinitely long packed tubes is thermodynamically stable, but only at high pressure. The full phase diagram of the model, beside the fluid phase, displays four different stable crystals. A gas-liquid critical point, and hence a liquid phase, is not detected.
Angewandte Chemie | 2013
Bo Peng; Frank Smallenburg; Arnout Imhof; Marjolein Dijkstra; Alfons van Blaaderen
With (dumb)bells on: A variety of colloidal stereoisomers (all the same materials) have been prepared through evaporation of emulsions by using symmetric and asymmetric dumbbell-shaped particles (see figure). The colloid configurations are in good agreement with the results of computer simulations.