Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.
J Chem Phys. 2011 Oct 28;135(16):164902. doi: 10.1063/1.3655358.
We have only rules of thumb with which to predict how a material will crystallize, chief among which is Ostwald's rule of stages. It states that the first phase to appear upon transformation of a parent phase is the one closest to it in free energy. Although sometimes upheld, the rule is without theoretical foundation and is not universally obeyed, highlighting the need for microscopic understanding of crystallization controls. Here we study in detail the crystallization pathways of a prototypical model of patchy particles. The range of crystallization pathways it exhibits is richer than can be predicted by Ostwald's rule, but a combination of simulation and analytic theory reveals clearly how these pathways are selected by microscopic parameters. Our results suggest strategies for controlling self-assembly pathways in simulation and experiment.
我们只有一些经验法则来预测物质将如何结晶,其中最重要的是奥斯特瓦尔德阶段规则。它指出,在母相转变时出现的第一相是与其自由能最接近的相。尽管有时被支持,但该规则没有理论基础,也不普遍遵守,这凸显了对结晶控制的微观理解的必要性。在这里,我们详细研究了嵌段粒子原型模型的结晶途径。它表现出的结晶途径范围比奥斯特瓦尔德规则所能预测的要丰富,但模拟和分析理论的结合清楚地揭示了这些途径是如何被微观参数选择的。我们的结果为控制模拟和实验中的自组装途径提供了策略。