Kinetics of Crystallization and Orientational Ordering in Dipolar Particle Systems
Abstract
The kinetic mechanisms underlying bottom-up assembly of colloidal particles
have been widely investigated in efforts to control crystallization pathways
and to direct growth into targeted superstructures for applications including
photonic crystals. Current work builds on recent progress in the development of
kinetic theories for crystal growth of body-centered-cubic crystals in systems
with short-range inter-particle interactions, accounting for a greater
diversity of crystal structures and the role of the longer-ranged interactions
and orientational degrees of freedom arising in polar systems. We address the
importance of orientational ordering processes in influencing crystal growth in
such polar systems, thus advancing the theory beyond the treatment of the
translational ordering processes considered in previous investigations. The
work employs comprehensive molecular-dynamics simulations that resolve key
crystallization processes, and are used in the development of a quantitative
theoretical framework based on ideas from time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau
theory. The significant impact of orientational ordering on the crystallization
kinetics could be potentially leveraged to achieve crystallization kinetics
steering through external electric or magnetic fields. Our combined
theory/simulation approach provides opportunities for future investigations of
more complex crystallization kinetics.