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Liquid-like growth of colloidal nanocrystals of coalescence

Our understanding of the growth of crystals is dominated by the classical description according to which individual atoms or molecules, driven by supersaturation, add to crystal facets. As a result, the growth of hard matter is still mostly considered to be fundamentally incomparable to the growth of soft matter, like polymers or liquids. By a combination of experiment and modeling we here show how amine-capped PbS colloidal nanoparticles grow in the absence of supersaturation by coalescence, like droplets in an emulsion. Specifically, we (i) determine that the rates of crystal-crystal coalescence are remarkably high (10^-2 to 10^1 M^-1*s^-1) in spite of the steric stabilization of the particles, and are comparable to those of bimolecular reactions, (thereby providing a new avenue for the development of a form of chemistry where the reactants are colloids rather than molecules), (ii) elucidate the rate limiting steps of crystal-crystal coalescence leading us to propose design rules to control it, and (iii) demonstrate a simple, two-parameter model that predicts quantitatively this process and its dependence on the ligands. Lastly, we use Brownian dynamics simulations to show how crowding effects and the relatively large size of the particles compared to their mean free path explain these remarkably large rates of coalescence and, at the same time, the puzzlingly low values of activation energy previously reported for oriented attachment processes.

preprint2020arXivOpen access

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