posted on 2012-04-24, 00:00authored byDaisuke Nagao, Maki Sugimoto, Ayako Okada, Haruyuki Ishii, Mikio Konno, Arnout Imhof, Alfons van Blaaderen
Assembly and directed orientation of anisotropic particles
with
an external ac electric field in a range from 1 kHz to 2 MHz were
studied for asymmetric composite dumbbells incorporating a silica,
titania, or titania/silica (titania:silica = 75:25 vol %) sphere.
The asymmetric composite dumbbells, which were composed of a polymethylmethacrylate
(PMMA)-coated sphere (core–shell part) and a polystyrene (PSt)
lobe, were synthesized with a soap-free emulsion polymerization to
prepare PMMA-coated inorganic spheres and another soap-free emulsion
polymerization to form a polystyrene (PSt) lobe from the PMMA-coated
inorganic spheres. The composite dumbbells dispersed in water were
directly observed with optical microscopy. The dumbbells incorporating
a silica sphere oriented parallel to an electric field in the whole
frequency range and they formed a pearl chain structure at a high
frequency of 2 MHz. The titania-incorporated dumbbells formed chain
structures, in which they contacted their core–shell parts
and oriented perpendicularly to a low-frequency (kHz) field, whereas
they oriented parallel to a high-frequency (MHz) field. Since the
alignment of dumbbells in the chains depends not only on the interparticle
forces but also on the torque that the induced dipoles in the dumbbells
experience in the electric field, the orientation of dumbbells perpendicular
to the electric field was the case dominated by the interparticle
force, whereas the other orientation was the case dominated by the
torque. The present experiments show that the incorporation of inorganic
dumbbells is an effective way to control the assembled structure and
orientation with an electric field.