Guest-guided anchoring patterns of cyclodextrin supramolecular microcrystals on droplet surfaces

Carbohydr Polym. 2024 Aug 1:337:122142. doi: 10.1016/j.carbpol.2024.122142. Epub 2024 Apr 21.

Abstract

The growth of cyclodextrin inclusion complexes (ICs) on oil/water interfaces represents a beautiful example of spontaneous pattern formation in nature. How the supramolecules evolve remains a challenge because surface confinement can frustrate microcrystal growth and give rise to unusual phase transitions. Here we investigate the self-assembly of ICs on droplet surfaces using microfluidics, which allows directly visualizing packing, wetting and ordering of the microcrystals anchored on the surface. The oil guests of distinct molecular structures can direct the assembly of the ICs and largely affect anchoring dynamics of the ICs microcrystals, leading to a range of behaviors including orientating, slipping, buckling, jamming, or merging. We discuss the behaviors observed in terms of the flexibility of the building blocks, which offers a new degree of freedom through which to tailor their properties and gives rise to a striking feature of anchoring patterns that have no counterpart in normal colloidal crystals.

Keywords: Confined interface; Interfacial anchoring patterns; Microfluidic; Self-assembly; Supramolecular microcrystals.