Colloidal molecules in microgravity assembled by critical Casimir forces
Categoría del artículo: Research Note
Publicado en línea: 14 mar 2025
Páginas: 21 - 29
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/gsr-2025-0001
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© 2025 P. J. M. Swinkels et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
The assembly of micro and nanometer-scale colloidal particles is both of scientific interest to address fundamental questions such as crystallization and the glass transition, and for applications in photonics and optoelectronics. The ability to tailor the building blocks and their interactions make these colloidal systems particularly useful for the assembly of new materials from the bottom up. Recently, anisotropic interactions have moved into the focus as they enable higher structural complexity, allowing in principle the assembly of structures as complex as those of molecules.
While many theoretical and simulation studies exist, achieving directional bonding in experiments on colloidal systems is challenging, and reliable systems allowing interaction control on the scale of
However, typically the particle interactions are fixed, and the assembly process irreversible, making repeated measurements with varying particle interactions difficult, especially in a restricted space-based environment. To reversibly control the interactions between the particles on the
Here, we explore the application of critical Casimir forces to study complex colloidal assembly in microgravity. Based on successful microgravity research on isotropically interacting particles and ground-based experiments on patchy particles, we describe assembly experiments in microgravity, in which particles interact via temperature-tunable, directed interactions. These experiments open the door to studying complex structure formation in real space in microgravity, using remote control.
The first experiments of this kind used simple spherical particles; by varying the attractive strength through small changes in temperature, phase transitions from colloidal gas to colloidal liquid and to crystal were observed [19,20]. Particle-scale images of these transitions are shown in Fig. 1a–c. The microscope images show particles which are dispersed far below the solvent critical temperature

Assembly of equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium structures by critical Casimir forces. (a–d) Confocal microscopy images of particles in equilibrium gas (a), liquid (b) and crystal (c) phases, and out-of-equilibrium, fractal aggregate (d). Temperature offsets
Direct measurement of the effective pair potentials allowed confirmation of the observed phase behavior by Monte Carlo simulations [22]. The pair potentials were determined from particle pair correlation functions measured in dilute suspensions [20] and subsequently compared with predictions based on critical Casimir scaling theory and the Derjaguin approximation [23]. The corresponding phase diagram is shown in Fig. 1e, where gas (G), liquid (L) and crystal (C) phases are indicated as a function of colloidal volume fraction
These results motivate a deeper study of out-of-equilibrium assembly processes. On ground, however, gravity precludes observation of the genuine assembly process: the assembling structures sediment, altering the growth process, and ultimately hindering the observation of large, fully grown structures. To observe the assembly process under ideal conditions, a series of microgravity experiments was performed on board the International Space Station (ISS), which provided insight into how these out-of-equilibrium structures grow [12], what their genuine gravity-free structure is [24], and how they initially nucleate in their incipient stage [25]. Systematic studies of the attraction-dependent assembly were conducted by monitoring the structure factor after temperature jumps to various temperature offsets
Density-matched samples employing hydrogel (PNIPAM) particles on the ground allowed further studies of the aggregation. These studies focused on the gelation, i.e., the percolation of clusters of aggregated particles. Real-space imaging by confocal microscopy revealed an intriguing nonequilibrium percolation process behind the colloidal gelation of these short-range attractive particles [27]. Upon approaching the gelation point, the cluster size and correlation length diverged with exponents ~1.6 and 0.8, respectively, consistent with percolation theory, while detailed balance in the particle attachment and detachment processes was broken. The results are consistent with an analytic model based on a kinetic master equation for partially reversible aggregation, solved in the limit of single-particle break up [28].
These measurements highlight the versality of the tunable model system, allowing insight into equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium assembly. Beyond the structures made from simple spherical particles, more complex structures can be assembled using patchy particles with anisotropic interactions, providing specific valency [4]. The idea is illustrated in Fig. 2: The patchy particles, exhibiting hydrophobic or hydrophilic surface patches, localize solvent fluctuations between their patches when suspended in binary solvents close to their critical point. The resulting attractive critical Casimir force between the patches leads to patch-to-patch assembly. This directional bonding mimics the covalent bonding of molecules, allowing assembly of specific molecular structures, see Fig. 2b–d. The hydrophobic or hydrophilic patches set the adsorption preference for one of the components of the liquid mixture; for example, hydrophobic patches exhibit affinity for the less polar component of the binary solvent, i.e., lutidine in a lutidine-water mixture, thereby localizing lutidine-rich solvent fluctuations between patches and inducing attractive critical Casimir interactions between them (Fig. 2a). Using divalent or tetravalent particles, these patch-oriented interactions should lead to chains, networks or other open or cyclic molecular structures (Fig. 2b–d). Indeed, experiments on the ground confirmed the formation of these structures. Examples of chains assembled from dipatch particles are shown in Fig. 3a–d. The patch–patch bonding is clearly observed in the fluorescent image in Fig. 3a highlighting the dyed patches as white dots. The microscope images in Fig. 3b–d show that the chain length is controlled by the attractive strength: The smaller the temperature offset

Directional bonding by critical Casimir forces. (a) Illustration of patchy colloids binding via their patches. The attraction is mediated by solvent fluctuations, localized between the patches by their hydrophobic affinity. (b–d) Possible structures formed by di-patch (b), mixtures of di- and tetra-patch (c) and pure tetra-patch particles (right).

Equilibrium polymerization of di-patch particles. (a) Fluorescence image showing a chain of particles bonded by critical Casimir forces via their patches (bright dots). Scale bar is 3μm (b–d) Microscope images of di-patch particle chains at increasing attractive strength (decreasing
Adding a small number of 4-patch particles, the chains cross-link and eventually form networks (Fig. 3f). The higher-valency particles introduce branching points that link the chains into a polymer network. The cluster size distributions then show a transition from exponential to power-law (Fig. 3g), indicating the emerging percolation of the network. The remarkable feature of this network is that its topology is set by the valency and bonding angles of the particles, independent of the quench history. These networks are known as equilibrium gels [32] and their properties can be derived from equilibrium statistical mechanics alone [33,34], unlike common colloidal gels that form by arrest in an out-of-equilibrium process. While the existence of equilibrium networks of limited-valency particles has been shown in simulations [35,36,37], their direct experimental observation has been challenging. The networks grown on a cover slip show indeed some agreement with equilibrium predictions [38], yet full three-dimensional measurements are needed to accurately test equilibrium predictions. In principle, the two-dimensional network in Fig. 3f can be extended into the third dimension by using smaller particles (Fig. 3h) or density matching, but microgravity experiments are needed to grow large three-dimensional network structures to thoroughly test equilibrium predictions.
Further molecule-like structures arise when using tetra-patch particles alone: the bond angles of these particles mimic sp3-coordinated carbon, promising a rich variety of structures that are known from organic chemistry. Such structures are indeed observed when the critical Casimir interaction becomes sufficiently strong close to

Assembly of colloidal organic molecules. Backbones of colloidal organic-molecule analogues (“colloidal alkanes”), assembled from tetra-patch particles: Colloidal butane (a), 2-butyne (b), cyclobutane (c), cyclopentane (d) and methylcyclohexane (e), microscopy image (left) reconstruction (center) and chemical symbol (right). Reproduced with adaptation from [39].

Conformations and pseudorotation of colloidal cyclopentane. (a) Three-dimensional reconstructions of typical conformations of colloidal cyclopentane: Planar conformation (top), twist (or ‘half-chair’) conformation (bottom left), and envelope (or ‘bend’) conformation (bottom right). (b) Time series of three-dimensional configurations showing pseudo-rotation of colloidal cyclopentane. Snapshots are t = 12s apart. The typical relaxation time of a conformation is 24s, allowing for convenient observation. Symbols + and − indicate particles above and below the average plane, respectively, and arrows indicate particle movement towards the next time step. (c) Transition states in polar space during pseudorotation of three colloidal cyclopentane rings. Black trajectory: numbers correspond to snapshots in (b). Reproduced with adaptation from [39].
The formation of larger structures could give insight into equilibrium reactions of larger molecules, but on earth their observation is limited to small gravitational heights and disturbed by gravity. Any larger structure settles while it forms, thus disturbing the growth process as well as the equilibrium dynamics and reactions. This precludes insight into the genuine assembly processes, especially for large, complex structures.
To overcome this limitation, experiments exploring patchy particle assembly in microgravity have been performed during the ACE-T2 mission on board the International Space Station (ISS). The samples contained suspensions of dipatch particles in a binary solvent, tetra-patch particles in a binary solvent and mixtures of di- and tetra-patch particles in this solvent. The suspensions are composed of 0.2% vol patchy particles (composite spherical particles with polystyrene body and TPM patches [29]) in a binary aqueous solvent of 25% vol Lutidine and 75% vol H20 with 1mM MgSO4 salt. The divalent salt increases the attraction contrast between the hydrophobic patches and the hydrophilic bulk, leading to clearly distinct patch–patch attraction between particles for this solvent composition. Phase separation of the binary mixture is expected near Tc=33.82°C [29]. The suspensions are filled in glass capillaries, and the experiments are performed on the Light Microscopy Module (LMM) in space, an automated microscope that has been built up in stages. The current stage allowed flexible imaging (bright field and confocal microscopy) with temperature control for physical experiments, controlled remotely from the ground. The experiment (ACE-T2) included confocal microscopy using a 532-nm laser, a confocal scanner, and an 8- to 12-bit digital CCD camera. To avoid heat sinks or gradients in the sample that would greatly affect the temperature-sensitive assembly, we used air objectives that have a lower numerical aperture (NA), and thus lower optical resolution, but avoid direct thermal contact with the sample.
The operations included two stages: First, a temperature ramp with a low-magnification lens was used to determine the particle aggregation temperature,

Assembly of patchy particles in microgravity. (a,b) Preliminary results of assembled di- and tetra-patch particles, obtained during the ACE-T2 experiments. The pictures show confocal microscope images of the assembled particles with overlays indicating a few of the assembled structures. (c) Characteristic motifs: chains formed from di-patch particles (I), kinks (II) and branching points (III) due to tetra-patch particles. (d) Bright-field image of a ground experiment performed under similar conditions (