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Photonic Capsule Sensors with Built-In Colloidal Crystallites.

Tae Min ChoiKwanghwi JeJin-Gyu ParkGun Ho LeeSanghyuk Park Shin-Hyun Kim
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2018)
Technologies to monitor microenvironmental conditions and its spatial distribution are in high demand, yet remain unmet need. Herein, photonic microsensors are designed in a capsule format that can be injected, suspended, and implanted in any target volume. Colorimetric sensors are loaded in the core of microcapsules by assembling core-shell colloids into crystallites through the depletion attraction. The shells of the colloids are made of a temperature-responsive hydrogel, which enables the crystallites to rapidly and widely tune the structural color in response to a change in temperature while maintaining close-packed arrays. The spherical symmetry of the microcapsules renders them optically isotropic, i.e., displaying orientation-independent color. In addition, as a solid membrane is used to protect the delicate crystallites from external stresses, their high stability is assured. More importantly, each microcapsule reports the temperature of its microenvironment so that a suspension of capsules can provide information on the spatial distribution of the temperature.
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