VIII Leopoldo García-Colín Mexican Meeting on Mathematical and Experimental Physics
Experimental Condensed Matter Physics Symposium
El Colegio Nacional, Mexico City
October 23-27 2023
El Colegio Nacional, Mexico City
October 23-27 2023
Leopoldo García-Colín Scherer (1930-2012)
Participants
Jaime Ruiz García (UASLP)
Máximo López López (CINVESTAV-IPN)
Catalina Haro Pérez (UAM-A)
Rodrigo Sánchez García (UAM-I)
Juan Valentín Escobar Sotomayor (IF-UNAM)
Pedro Díaz-Leyva (UAM-I)
Mauricio Carvajal Tinoco (CINVESTAV-IPN)
Anna Kozina (IQ-UNAM)
Ramón Castañeda Priego (UG)
Emmanuel Haro Poniatowski (UAM-I)
Zenaida Briceño Ahumada (IQ-UNAM)
Juan Rubén Gómez Solano (IF-UNAM)
Amir Maldonado Arce (UniSon)
Erick Sarmiento Gómez (UG)
Rolando Castillo Caballero (IF-UNAM)
Luis Fernando Rojas Ochoa CINVESTAV-IPN
Orest Pizio (IQ-UNAM)
Orlando Guzmán López (UAM-I)
Fernando Donado Pérez (UAEH)
José Antonio Moreno Razo (UAM-I)
Jorge Delgado García (UG)
Cecilia Noguez Garrido (IF-UNAM)
Alondra A. Benvenuta Bermúdez (IQ-UNAM)
Rodrigo Z. Gómez Herrera (IQ-UNAM)
Carolina Castañeda Fernández (IQ-UNAM)
Samuel López Godoy (IQ-UNAM)
Diana Aracely Solis (IQ-UNAM)
Dulce América Vazquez (IQ-UNAM)
David Pine
New York University
Self-assembly of colloidal diamond
The self-assembly of colloidal particles into the cubic diamond structure has been a longstanding goal because of its potential for making materials with a photonic band gap. These materials suppress the spontaneous emission of light and are valued for their applications as optical waveguides, filters, laser resonators, for improving light-harvesting technologies, and for other applications. This talk will describe a method for making colloidal particles that self-assemble into the cubic colloidal diamond structure. The particles consist of partially compressed tetrahedral clusters with retracted sticky patches. They self-assemble via DNA-mediated patch-patch adhesion in coordination with a steric interlock mechanism that selects the proper staggered bond conformation required for cubic diamond. Simulations of the self-assembly process reveal a subtle interplay between the attractive patch-patch interactions, entropy, and gravity.
Seth Fraden
Brandeis University
Hierarchical assembly is more robust than egalitarian assembly in synthetic capsids
Self-assembly of complex and functional materials remains a grand challenge in soft material science. Efficient assembly depends on a delicate balance between thermodynamic and kinetic effects, requiring fine-tuning affinities and concentrations of subunits. By contrast, we introduce an assembly paradigm that allows large error-tolerance in the subunit affinity and helps avoid kinetic traps. Our combined experimental and computational approach uses a model system of triangular subunits programmed to assemble into T = 3 icosahedral capsids comprising 60 units. The experimental platform uses DNA origami [1] to create monodisperse colloids whose 3D geometry is controlled to nanometer precision with two distinct bonds whose affinities are controlled to kBT precision, quantified in situ by static light scattering. The computational model uses a coarse-grained representation of subunits, short-ranged potentials, and Langevin dynamics. Experimental observations and modeling reveal that when the bond affinities are unequal, two distinct hierarchical assembly pathways, in which the subunits first form dimers in one case, and pentamers in another, produce complete capsids faster. Such hierarchical pathways are more robust against affinity variation than egalitarian pathways, in which all binding sites have equal strengths. This finding suggests that hierarchical assembly may be a general engineering principle for optimizing self-assembly of complex target structures.
Program