skip to main content

Chemical Engineering Seminar

Thursday, April 30, 2015
4:00pm to 5:00pm
Add to Cal
Spalding Laboratory 106 (Hartley Memorial Seminar Room)
Engineering entropy in nanomaterials: the bad, the ugly, and the good
Fernando A. Escobedo, Marjorie L. Hart Professor of Engineering, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Cornell University,

By elucidating structure-property relationships of soft matter, molecular simulations can assist in the engineering of materials with desirable properties; e.g., properties that originate in the creation of special types of structural order or the control of phase transitions.  In mesophases like liquid crystals and plastic solids, e.g., the material has a structural order that lies in between that of solids and liquids, which often offer a combination of characteristics that makes them attractive to create materials with interesting properties.  We concentrate on colloidal particles that can form ordered solid and mesophases that possess unique optical, rheological, and mechanical properties, making them attractive components in the preparation of novel composite, photonic, plasmonic, and photovoltaic materials.  This is motivated by the ability of current synthetic routes to generate tailor-made nanoparticles of tunable sizes, shapes, chemistry, and surface patterning, which has opened the door to a new physical-chemistry with "super atoms" as building blocks.  We attempt to elucidate some of the fundamental principles that govern the self-assembly of such super atoms, and while molecular engineering often focuses on tuning chemical interactions, we focus first on the engineering of entropic interactions as they are often equally crucial but less appreciated.  I will describe our recent efforts on the use of molecular simulations to map out the phase behavior of suspensions of particles with polyhedral shapes, including the formation of multicomponent compounds.  Our results provide both a basis to existing experimental observations and predictions of novel phases yet to be seen in the lab.  In particular, we predict the formation of various novel entropy-aided self-assembling liquid- and plastic-crystalline phases which are resilient to size polydispersity.  These and other examples illustrate the potential benefits of a more pro-active approach to harnessing the often overlooked power of entropy.

For more information, please contact Martha Hepworth by email at [email protected].