- Award ID(s):
- 2111163
- NSF-PAR ID:
- 10378624
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Nature Communications
- Volume:
- 13
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2041-1723
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
DNA-coated colloids can crystallize into a multitude of lattices, ranging from face-centered cubic to diamond, opening avenues to producing structures with useful photonic properties. The potential design space of DNA-coated colloids is large, but its exploration is hampered by a reliance on chemically modified DNA that is slow and expensive to commercially synthesize. Here we introduce a method to controllably tailor the sequences of DNA-coated particles by covalently appending new sequence domains onto the DNA grafted to colloidal particles. The tailored particles crystallize as readily and at the same temperature as those produced via direct chemical synthesis, making them suitable for self-assembly. Moreover, we show that particles coated with a single sequence can be converted into a variety of building blocks with differing specificities by appending different DNA sequences to them. This method will make it practical to identify optimal and complex particle sequence designs and paves the way to programming the assembly kinetics of DNA-coated colloids.more » « less
-
Particles with ligand–receptor contacts bind and unbind fluctuating “legs” to surfaces, whose fluctuations cause the particle to diffuse. Quantifying the diffusion of such “nanoscale caterpillars” is a challenge, since binding events often occur on very short time and length scales. Here we derive an analytical formula, validated by simulations, for the long time translational diffusion coefficient of an overdamped nanocaterpillar, under a range of modeling assumptions. We demonstrate that the effective diffusion coefficient, which depends on the microscopic parameters governing the legs, can be orders of magnitude smaller than the background diffusion coefficient. Furthermore it varies rapidly with temperature, and reproduces the striking variations seen in existing data and our own measurements of the diffusion of DNA-coated colloids. Our model gives insight into the mechanism of motion, and allows us to ask: when does a nanocaterpillar prefer to move by sliding, where one leg is always linked to the surface, and when does it prefer to move by hopping, which requires all legs to unbind simultaneously? We compare a range of systems (viruses, molecular motors, white blood cells, protein cargos in the nuclear pore complex, bacteria such as Escherichia coli , and DNA-coated colloids) and present guidelines to control the mode of motion for materials design.more » « less
-
DNA-coated colloids can self-assemble into an incredible diversity of crystal structures, but their applications have been limited by poor understanding and control over the crystallization dynamics. To address this challenge, we use microfluidics to quantify the kinetics of DNA-programmed self-assembly along the entire crystallization pathway, from thermally activated nucleation through reaction-limited and diffusion-limited phases of crystal growth. Our detailed measurements of the temperature and concentration dependence of the kinetics at all stages of crystallization provide a stringent test of classical theories of nucleation and growth. After accounting for the finite rolling and sliding rates of micrometer-sized DNA-coated colloids, we show that modified versions of these classical theories predict the absolute nucleation and growth rates with quantitative accuracy. We conclude by applying our model to design and demonstrate protocols for assembling large single crystals with pronounced structural coloration, an essential step in creating next-generation optical metamaterials from colloids.more » « less
-
We use a nonequilibrium variational principle to optimize the steady-state, shear-induced interconversion of self-assembled nanoclusters of DNA-coated colloids. Employing this principle within a stochastic optimization algorithm allows us to identify design strategies for functional materials. We find that far-from-equilibrium shear flow can significantly enhance the flux between specific colloidal states by decoupling trade-offs between stability and reactivity required by systems in equilibrium. For isolated nanoclusters, we find nonequilibrium strategies for amplifying transition rates by coupling a given reaction coordinate to the background shear flow. We also find that shear flow can be made to selectively break detailed balance and maximize probability currents by coupling orientational degrees of freedom to conformational transitions. For a microphase consisting of many nanoclusters, we study the flux of colloids hopping between clusters. We find that a shear flow can amplify the flux without a proportional compromise on the microphase structure. This approach provides a general means of uncovering design principles for nanoscale, autonomous, functional materials driven far from equilibrium.
-
Abstract Janus colloids with one attractive patch on an otherwise repulsive particle surface serve as model systems to explore structure formation of particles with chemically heterogeneous surfaces such as proteins. While there are numerous computer studies, there are few experimental realizations due to a lack of means to produce such colloids with a well-controlled variable Janus balance. Here, we report a simple scalable method to precisely vary the Janus balance over a wide range and selectively functionalize one patch with DNA. We observe, via experiment and simulation, the dynamic formation of diverse superstructures: colloidal micelles, chains, or bilayers, depending on the Janus balance. Flexible dimer chains form through cooperative polymerization while trimer chains form by a two-stage process, first by cooperative polymerization into disordered aggregates followed by condensation into more ordered stiff trimer chains. Introducing substrate binding through depletion catalyzes dimer chains to form nonequilibrium rings that otherwise do not form.