Condensed Matter Seminar: Polyhedral Crystalline Membranes

Prof. Monica Olvera de la Cruz, Northwestern University

23 May 2016, 16:00 
Kaplun Building, Room 118 
Condensed Matter Seminar

Abstract:

Polyhedral geometries have beguiled scientists and mathematicians for millennia.  In recent times polyhedral shapes have been identified at the microscopic level in crystalline shells such as fullerenes, viral capsids and protein-based bacterial organelles. The most frequently found polyhedron in homogeneous crystalline shells is the icosahedron. We demonstrate that other geometries arise spontaneously in shells formed by more than one component. We provide computational and experimental evidence of the spontaneous buckling of closed shells of oppositely charged molecules, where electrostatics drives their co-assembly, and orders the assembly into faceted ionic structures with various crystalline domains. Our work explains the existence of various regular and irregular polyhedral shells found in nature, and provides the principles for designing nanocontainers with specific shapes and symmetries for numerous applications in material and life sciences.

 

Seminar Organizer: Prof. Shimshon Barad

 

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