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Rationally Designed Complex, Hierarchical Microarchitectures

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2013

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American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
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Noorduin, W. L., A. Grinthal, L. Mahadevan, and J. Aizenberg. 2013. “Rationally Designed Complex, Hierarchical Microarchitectures.” Science 340 (6134) (May 16): 832–837. doi:10.1126/science.1234621.

Abstract

The emergence of complex nano/microstructures is of fundamental interest, and the ability to program their form has practical ramifications in fields such as optics, catalysis and electronics. We developed carbonate/silica microstructures in a dynamic reaction-diffusion system that allows us to rationally devise schemes for precisely sculpting a great variety of elementary shapes by diffusion of CO2 in a solution of barium chloride and sodium metasilicate. We identify two distinct growth modes and show how continuous and discrete modulations in CO2 concentration, pH and temperature can be used to deterministically switch between different regimes and create a bouquet of hierarchically assembled multiscale microstructures with unprecedented levels of complexity and precision. These results outline a nanotechnology strategy for “collaborating” with self-assembly processes in real time to build arbitrary tectonic architectures.

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