Scientists develop innovative aerosol system to build asymmetric superstructures

A research team has developed a novel aerosol-based emulsion system that enables the self-assembly of asymmetric nanostructures—something long considered a major challenge in materials science. The team includes researchers from the Hefei Institutes of Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, together with collaborators at the University of California.
Their work was recently in Advanced Materials.
Traditional emulsion droplets tend to be spherical due to surface tension, limiting the structural complexity of the materials they help create. While useful in fields like biomedicine and food science, this symmetry makes it hard to achieve advanced functions. Breaking this symmetry has been a key goal, but methods involving surfactants or complex emulsifiers often struggle with stability and contamination.
The new system sidesteps those issues by creating "transient emulsion aerosols" —short-lived, surfactant-free droplets formed by atomizing a two-phase liquid. These droplets allow nanoparticles to self-assemble in midair, without relying on stabilizing chemicals. The dynamic diffusion process brings interfacial tension close to zero, enabling the formation of non-spherical structures.
"With this approach, gold nanoparticles can form uniform hemispherical structures," said Liu Dilong, a member of the team, "Traditional emulsions can't achieve that."
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(a) Schematic of transient emulsion aerosol construction and self-assembly; (b–f) Morphological features of hemispherical superstructures. Credit: Liu Dilong -
Scientists Develop Innovative Aerosol System to Build Asymmetric Superstructures. Credit: Liu Dilong
The team discovered that the process works due to a difference in how the two liquids in the droplet diffuse: water escapes faster than 1-butanol enters, leading to an internal asymmetry. This results in hollow or curved structures, driven by a mechanism similar to the Kirkendall effect observed in metallurgy.
This new technique has already shown promise for real-world applications. The researchers produced arrays of tiny silica microlenses with adjustable magnification, useful for high-resolution biological imaging. They also used the method to create textured coatings with excellent light-scattering properties, which could benefit Micro-LED displays and other optical devices.
The work offers a new, clean, and scalable route to build complex nanostructures, opening up exciting possibilities for materials design.
More information: Dilong Liu et al. Asymmetric Self-Assembly of Colloidal Superstructures in Nested Transient Emulsion Aerosols, Advanced Materials (2025). ,
Journal information: Advanced Materials
Provided by Chinese Academy of Sciences