April 28, 2017
Journal Article

Direction-Specific van der Waals Attraction Between Rutile TiO2 Nanocrystals

Abstract

Mutual lattice orientations dictate the types and magnitudes of forces between crystalline particles. When lattice polarizability is anisotropic, the van der Waals dispersion attraction can, in principle, contribute to this direction dependence. Here we report direct measurement of this attraction between rutile nanocrystals, as a function of their mutual orientation and surface hydration extent. At tens of nanometers of separation the attraction is weak and shows no dependence on azimuthal alignment nor surface hydration. At separations of approximately one hydration layer the attraction is strongly dependent on azimuthal alignment, and systematically decreases as intervening water density increases. Measured forces are in close agreement with predictions from Lifshitz theory, and show that dispersion forces are capable of generating a torque between particles interacting in solution and between grains in materials.

Revised: February 11, 2020 | Published: April 28, 2017

Citation

Zhang X., Y. He, M.L. Sushko, J. Liu, L. Luo, J.J. De Yoreo, and S.X. Mao, et al. 2017. Direction-Specific van der Waals Attraction Between Rutile TiO2 Nanocrystals. Science 356, no. 6336:434-437. PNNL-SA-122696. doi:10.1126/science.aah6902