We present the synthesis of colloidal silica particles with new shapes by manipulating the growth conditions of rods that are growing from polyvinylpyrrolidone-loaded water-rich droplets containing ammonia and ethanol. The silica rods grow by ammonia-catalyzed hydrolysis and condensation of tetraethoxysilane (TEOS). The lengthwise growth of these silica rods gives us the opportunity to change the conditions at any time during the reaction. In this work, we vary the availability of hydrolyzed monomers as a function of time and study how the change in balance between the hydrolysis and condensation reactions affects a typical synthesis (as described in more detail by our group earlier1). First, we show that in a “standard” synthesis, there are two silica growth processes occurring; one in the oil phase and one in the droplet. The growth process in the water droplet causes the lengthwise growth of the rods. The growth process in the oil phase produces a thin silica layer around the rods, but also causes the nucleation of 70 nm silica spheres. During a typical rod growth, silica formation mainly takes place in the droplet. The addition of partially hydrolyzed TEOS or tetramethoxysilane (TMOS) to the growth mixture results in a change in balance between the hydrolysis and condensation reaction. As a result, the growth also starts to take place on the surface of the water droplet and thus from the oil phase, not only from inside the droplet onto a silica rod sticking out of the droplet. Carefully tuning the growth from the droplet and the growth from the oil phase allowed us to create nanospheres, hollow silica rods, hollow sphere rod systems (colloidal matchsticks), and bent silica rods.
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