4.8 Article

Colloidal Photonic Crystals toward Structural Color Palettes for Security Materials

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 25, Issue 13, Pages 2684-2690

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cm4012603

Keywords

colloids; colloidal crystals; photonic crystals; structural color; lithography

Funding

  1. Creative Research Initiative Program of the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology for Complementary Hybridization of Optical and Fluidic Devices for Integrated Optofluidic Systems

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Self-assembly of monodisperse colloidal particles into regular lattices has provided relatively simple and economical methods to prepare photonic crystals. The photonic stop band of colloidal crystals appears as opalescent structural colors, which are potentially useful for display devices, colorimetric sensors, and optical filters. However, colloidal crystals have low durability, and an undesired scattering of light makes the structures white and translucent. Moreover, micropatterning of colloidal crystals usually requires complex molding procedures, thereby limiting their practical applications. To overcome such shortcomings, we develop a pragmatic and amenable method to prepare colloidal photonic crystals with high optical transparency and physical rigidity using photocurable colloidal suspensions. The colloidal particles dispersed in a photocurable medium crystallized during capillary force-induced infiltration into a slab, and subsequent photopolymerization of the medium permanently solidifies the structures. Furthermore, conventional photolithography enables micropatterning of the crystal structures. The low index contrast between particles and matrix results in high transparency of the resultant composite structures and narrow reflection peaks, thereby enabling structural color mixing through the overlapping of distinct layers of the colloidal crystals. Multiple narrow peaks in the spectrum provide high selectivity in optical identification, thereby being potentially useful for security materials.

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