LSU Research Bites: Acoustic Vibrations Solve a Long-Standing Challenge in Nanoparticle Assembly
December 19, 2025
For decades, scientists have been trying to overcome a very specific challenge: arrange nanoparticles smaller than the eye can see into a perfectly ordered 鈥渟heet鈥 of particles 鈥 one particle thick 鈥 over a large surface area.
Imagine arranging pool balls perfectly inside a diamond pool table rack. Now imagine instead of pool balls, you are trying to similarly arrange extremely tiny plastic particles into a single layer on a surface. The particles want to clump and stick, like tiny pieces of Styrofoam when you are trying to clean up after unboxing furniture.
But why is a monolayer of nanoparticles over a surface useful in the first place? Nanoparticles have special properties because they are so small. Divide one meter into one billion pieces; one of those pieces is a nanometer.



Nanoparticles, especially when arranged just so, interact in special ways with light, vibration, and other inputs, making them perfect for use in ultra-sensitive biological and chemical sensors, light-absorbing or light-reflecting coatings, and more.
But how do you manipulate such tiny particles into a perfectly ordered, single layer? Before you suggest using the world鈥檚 tiniest pool ball rack 鈥 well, maybe try shaking the rack a bit?!
Kevin McPeak, Gordon A. & Mary Cain Professor of chemical engineering 星空无限传媒, and colleagues experimented with using specialized underwater speakers, or 鈥渢ransducers,鈥 to vibrate polystyrene nanoparticles on the water surface.
They found that resulting low-frequency waves (as when you drop a stone into a pond) were key to coaxing the particles into position, forming a high-quality monolayer. Put another way, the nanoparticles surfed the water waves right into position. This process is called 鈥渁coustic annealing.鈥
鈥淥ur study unambiguously demonstrates that low-frequency, e.g., sub-100 Hz, capillary waves are key to improving the long-range order of colloidal monolayers on an air鈥搘ater interface,鈥 McPeak said.
In the video at the link below, watch in real-time as vibrations and water waves help form a monolayer of plastic nanoparticles that diffract light to produce brilliant colors.
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