Maria Sushko1,Lili Liu1,Duo Song1
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory1
Maria Sushko1,Lili Liu1,Duo Song1
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory1
The development of structural hierarchy on various length scales during crystallization process is ubiquitous in biological systems and is common in synthetic nanomaterials. The driving forces for the formations of complex architectures range from local interfacial interactions, that modify interfacial speciation, local supersaturation, and nucleation barriers, to macroscopic interparticle forces. Although it is enticing to interpret the formation of hierarchical architectures as the assembly of independently nucleated building blocks, often crystallization pathways follow monomer-by-monomer addition with structural complexity arising from interfacial chemical coupling and strongly correlated fluctuation dynamics in the electric double layers. Here, we show that the development of structural hierarchy through heterogeneous nucleation is driven by dipolar and solvation forces. Specifically, coupled simulations and experimental studies revealed that dipole build up along the slow growth direction can trigger twinning and the development of branched architectures. Enthalpic solvation interactions were shown to either enhance or reduce the dipole moment of the nanoparticles and, thereby, control crystal morphology and architecture. The systematic studies of chemical coupling between different solvents and undercoordinated surface atoms of the growing nanocrystals revealed the mechanism of dimensionality control and the development of structural hierarchy in the absence of ligands or structure-directing agents.