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Suppressed self-diffusion of nanoscale constituents of a complex liquid

Authors :
Tanner, Christian P. N.
Wall, Vivian R. K.
Gababa, Mumtaz
Portner, Joshua
Jeong, Ahhyun
Hurley, Matthew J.
Leonard, Nicholas
Raybin, Jonathan G.
Utterback, James K.
Kim, Ahyoung
Fluerasu, Andrei
Sun, Yanwen
Moeller, Johannes
Zozulya, Alexey
Jo, Wonhyuk
Madsen, Anders
Talapin, Dmitri V.
Teitelbaum, Samuel W.
Ginsberg, Naomi S.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The ability to understand and ultimately control the transformations and properties of various nanoscale systems, from proteins to synthetic nanomaterial assemblies, hinges on the ability to directly elucidate their dynamics on their characteristic length and time scales. Here, we use MHz X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) to directly elucidate the characteristic microsecond-dynamics of density fluctuations of semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs), not only in a colloidal dispersion but also in a liquid phase consisting of densely packed, yet mobile, NCs with no long-range order. By carefully disentangling X-ray induced effects, we find the wavevector-dependent fluctuation rates in the liquid phase are suppressed relative to those in the colloidal phase and to those in experiments and hydrodynamic theories of densely packed repulsive particles. We show that the suppressed rates are due to a substantial decrease in the self-diffusion of NCs in the liquid phase, which we attribute to explicit attractive interactions. Via comparison with simulations, we find that the extracted strength of the attractions explains the stability of the liquid phase, in contrast to the gelation observed via XPCS in many other charged colloidal systems. This work opens the door to elucidating fast, condensed phase dynamics in a variety of complex fluids and other nanoscale soft matter systems, such as densely packed proteins and non-equilibrium self-assembly processes.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2404.17756
Document Type :
Working Paper