posted on 2020-09-21, 21:03authored byMartin Kapuscinski, Pierre Munier, Mo Segad, Lennart Bergström
Controlling
the morphology and crystallographic coherence of assemblies
of magnetic nanoparticles is a promising route to functional materials.
Time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) was combined with
microscopy and scaling analysis to probe and analyze evaporation-induced assembly
in levitating drops and thin films of superparamagnetic iron oxide
nanocubes in weak magnetic fields. We show that assembly of micrometer-sized
mesocrystals with a cubic shape preceded the formation of fibers with
a high degree of crystallographic coherence and tunable diameters.
The second-stage assembly of aligned cuboidal mesocrystals into fibers
was driven by the magnetic field, but the first-stage assembly of
the oleate-capped nanocubes was unaffected by weak magnetic fields.
The transition from 3D growth of the primary mesocrystals to the second
stage 1D assembly of the elongated fibers was related to the size
and field dependence of isotropic van der Waals and directional dipolar
interactions between the interacting mesocrystals.