Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity

Although significant progress has been made in the self-assembly of nanostructures, present successes heavily rely on precision in building block design, composition, and pair interactions. These requirements fundamentally limit our ability to synthesize macroscopic materials where the likelihood of...

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Main Authors: Ma, Le, Huang, Hejin, Vargo, Emma, Huang, Jingyu, Anderson, Christopher L, Chen, Tiffany, Kuzmenko, Ivan, Ilavsky, Jan, Wang, Cheng, Liu, Yi, Ercius, Peter, Alexander-Katz, Alfredo, Xu, Ting
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Chemical Society (ACS) 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/142470
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author Ma, Le
Huang, Hejin
Vargo, Emma
Huang, Jingyu
Anderson, Christopher L
Chen, Tiffany
Kuzmenko, Ivan
Ilavsky, Jan
Wang, Cheng
Liu, Yi
Ercius, Peter
Alexander-Katz, Alfredo
Xu, Ting
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Ma, Le
Huang, Hejin
Vargo, Emma
Huang, Jingyu
Anderson, Christopher L
Chen, Tiffany
Kuzmenko, Ivan
Ilavsky, Jan
Wang, Cheng
Liu, Yi
Ercius, Peter
Alexander-Katz, Alfredo
Xu, Ting
author_sort Ma, Le
collection MIT
description Although significant progress has been made in the self-assembly of nanostructures, present successes heavily rely on precision in building block design, composition, and pair interactions. These requirements fundamentally limit our ability to synthesize macroscopic materials where the likelihood of impurity inclusion escalates and, more importantly, to access molecular-to-nanoscopic-to-microscopic-to-macroscopic hierarchies, since the types and compositions of building blocks vary at each stage. Inspired by biological blends and high-entropy alloys, we hypothesize that diversifying the blend's composition can overcome these limitations. Increasing the number of components increases mixing entropy, leading to the dispersion of different components and, as a result, enhances interphase miscibility, weakens the dependence on specific pair interactions, and enables long-range cooperativity. This hypothesis is validated in complex blends containing small molecules, block copolymer-based supramolecules, and nanoparticles/colloidal particles. Hierarchically structured composites can be obtained with formulation flexibility in the filler selection and blend composition. It is worth noting that, by adding small molecules, we can solve the size constraint that plagues traditional block copolymer/nanoparticle blends. Detailed characterization and simulation further confirm that each component is distributed to locally mediate unfavorable interactions, cooperatively mitigate composition fluctuations, and retain structural fidelity. Furthermore, the blends have sufficient mobility to access tunable microstructures without compromising the order of the nanostructure. Besides establishing a kinetically viable pathway to release current constraints in the composite design and to navigate uncertainties during structure formation over multiple length scales, the present study demonstrates that entropy-driven behaviors can be realized in systems beyond high-entropy alloys despite inherent differences between metal alloys and organic/inorganic hybrids.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1424702023-06-12T17:33:05Z Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity Ma, Le Huang, Hejin Vargo, Emma Huang, Jingyu Anderson, Christopher L Chen, Tiffany Kuzmenko, Ivan Ilavsky, Jan Wang, Cheng Liu, Yi Ercius, Peter Alexander-Katz, Alfredo Xu, Ting Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Although significant progress has been made in the self-assembly of nanostructures, present successes heavily rely on precision in building block design, composition, and pair interactions. These requirements fundamentally limit our ability to synthesize macroscopic materials where the likelihood of impurity inclusion escalates and, more importantly, to access molecular-to-nanoscopic-to-microscopic-to-macroscopic hierarchies, since the types and compositions of building blocks vary at each stage. Inspired by biological blends and high-entropy alloys, we hypothesize that diversifying the blend's composition can overcome these limitations. Increasing the number of components increases mixing entropy, leading to the dispersion of different components and, as a result, enhances interphase miscibility, weakens the dependence on specific pair interactions, and enables long-range cooperativity. This hypothesis is validated in complex blends containing small molecules, block copolymer-based supramolecules, and nanoparticles/colloidal particles. Hierarchically structured composites can be obtained with formulation flexibility in the filler selection and blend composition. It is worth noting that, by adding small molecules, we can solve the size constraint that plagues traditional block copolymer/nanoparticle blends. Detailed characterization and simulation further confirm that each component is distributed to locally mediate unfavorable interactions, cooperatively mitigate composition fluctuations, and retain structural fidelity. Furthermore, the blends have sufficient mobility to access tunable microstructures without compromising the order of the nanostructure. Besides establishing a kinetically viable pathway to release current constraints in the composite design and to navigate uncertainties during structure formation over multiple length scales, the present study demonstrates that entropy-driven behaviors can be realized in systems beyond high-entropy alloys despite inherent differences between metal alloys and organic/inorganic hybrids. 2022-05-11T15:20:14Z 2022-05-11T15:20:14Z 2021 2022-05-11T15:15:50Z Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/142470 Ma, Le, Huang, Hejin, Vargo, Emma, Huang, Jingyu, Anderson, Christopher L et al. 2021. "Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity." ACS Nano, 15 (9). en 10.1021/ACSNANO.1C04606 ACS Nano Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/pdf American Chemical Society (ACS) Other Repository
spellingShingle Ma, Le
Huang, Hejin
Vargo, Emma
Huang, Jingyu
Anderson, Christopher L
Chen, Tiffany
Kuzmenko, Ivan
Ilavsky, Jan
Wang, Cheng
Liu, Yi
Ercius, Peter
Alexander-Katz, Alfredo
Xu, Ting
Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity
title Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity
title_full Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity
title_fullStr Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity
title_full_unstemmed Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity
title_short Diversifying Composition Leads to Hierarchical Composites with Design Flexibility and Structural Fidelity
title_sort diversifying composition leads to hierarchical composites with design flexibility and structural fidelity
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/142470
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