posted on 2025-01-17, 09:29authored byXiangyu Jiang, Bo Jiang, Manrui Mu, Tongyi Wang, Shi Sun, Jiaxin Xu, Shutao Wang, Yan Zhou, Jun Zhang, Wenle Li
Core–shell structures demonstrate superior capability
in
customizing properties across multiple scales, offering valuable potential
in catalysis, medicine, and performance materials. Integrating functional
nanoparticles in a spatially controlled manner is particularly appealing
for developing sophisticated architectures that support heterogeneous
characteristics and tandem reactions. However, creating such complex
structures with site-specific features remains challenging due to
the dynamic microenvironment during the shell-forming process, which
considerably impacts colloidal particle assembly. Here, we describe
a method to spatially deploy nanoscale assemblies within microscale
structures comprising a dense shell and a liquid core through colloidal
surface decoration coupled with emulsion-based synthesis. Exploiting
a spectrum of nanoparticles grafted with incrementally varying densities
of organic ligands, we reveal that nanofeatures can be selectively
sculpted onto the shell exterior, within the shell wall, and on the
interior surface. The versatility of this mechanism is validated by
systematically arranging nanoparticles with various compositions,
shapes, and dimensions. Spatially integrated nanotitania endows the
core–shell structures with localized photocatalytic abilities.
Additionally, distinctive surface modifications enable the simultaneous
yet independent implantation of diverse nanoparticles, yielding intricate
architectures with programmable functions. This generalizable approach
showcases a synthetic strategy to attain structural complexity and
functional sophistication reminiscent of those of biological systems
in nature.